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[Misc] Don’t dabble with my Scrabble.



BBassic

I changed this.
Jul 28, 2011
12,352
I should add we’ve met a lot of Gen Z mates at football and all of them are fun, resilient and like a drink or six. I don’t see the stereotype at all.
Quite. The truth of it, as is so often the case, is that most of Gen Z are perfectly normal people. As in every generation there will be people who buck that trend positively and negatively.

Trouble is "young person born between 1997 - 2012 copes admirably with the minutiae of every day life and contributes to society perfectly well" doesn't sell papers nearly as well as "tofu chomping loser baby children can't do anything these days"
 




Commander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Apr 28, 2004
12,958
London
I’ve just seen a Gen Z girl have an absolute meltdown because she got on the wrong train. She got on the train from Hove to Brighton instead of the one to Victoria a couple of minutes later.

She was completely unable to understand that she couldn’t get back to Hove in time for the train she missed, which her friend was on. While the conductor calmly explained there were loads of other trains from Brighton to London she just called her friend, a conversation that solely consisted of her yelling “oh my God” and “what the hell”. It was a literal playing out of @Commander ’s point.

That said, obviously not all Gen Z are the same. Both my kids get themselves everywhere on public transport. The boy managed to get himself to the Amex with his mate despite them getting the wrong train and having to go back to Brighton from Hassocks. He copes admirably with our somewhat fluid travel arrangements to away games and even helped navigate me round Amsterdam.
Doesn’t surprise me at all. Obviously they aren’t all the same, and I have hired some decent ones. But the ratio of incapable, entitled idiots to decent ones is incredibly low. The strange thing is it’s not like they necessarily lack a work ethic or don’t want to work. It’s not a laziness problem. It’s just that they need everything handed to them and can’t understand the mentality of just getting on with it, and when you mess it up, you’ll be able to do better next time. They don’t get this at all, and feel they should be put on some extensive training course to teach them how to do it perfectly, so they then won’t make any mistakes. But the world doesn’t work like that- you can’t learn everything from someone telling you what to do!
 




Chicken Run

Member Since Jul 2003
NSC Patron
Jul 17, 2003
18,494
Valley of Hangleton
Doesn’t surprise me at all. Obviously they aren’t all the same, and I have hired some decent ones. But the ratio of incapable, entitled idiots to decent ones is incredibly low. The strange thing is it’s not like they necessarily lack a work ethic or don’t want to work. It’s not a laziness problem. It’s just that they need everything handed to them and can’t understand the mentality of just getting on with it, and when you mess it up, you’ll be able to do better next time. They don’t get this at all, and feel they should be put on some extensive training course to teach them how to do it perfectly, so they then won’t make any mistakes. But the world doesn’t work like that- you can’t learn everything from someone telling you what to do!
Generation amaZon as my mate call’s them down at the Armed Forces Careers Office. If you think you’ve got challenges you need to see the calibre rocking up there each month… Majority do not participate in any team sports at all which apparently is of concern.
 


KZNSeagull

Well-known member
Nov 26, 2007
19,850
Wolsingham, County Durham
I’ve just seen a Gen Z girl have an absolute meltdown because she got on the wrong train. She got on the train from Hove to Brighton instead of the one to Victoria a couple of minutes later.

She was completely unable to understand that she couldn’t get back to Hove in time for the train she missed, which her friend was on. While the conductor calmly explained there were loads of other trains from Brighton to London she just called her friend, a conversation that solely consisted of her yelling “oh my God” and “what the hell”. It was a literal playing out of @Commander ’s point.

That said, obviously not all Gen Z are the same. Both my kids get themselves everywhere on public transport. The boy managed to get himself to the Amex with his mate despite them getting the wrong train and having to go back to Brighton from Hassocks. He copes admirably with our somewhat fluid travel arrangements to away games and even helped navigate me round Amsterdam.
But was her fit drip?
 




hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
61,379
Chandlers Ford
Both my kids get themselves everywhere on public transport. The boy managed to get himself to the Amex with his mate despite them getting the wrong train and having to go back to Brighton from Hassocks. He copes admirably with our somewhat fluid travel arrangements to away games and even helped navigate me round Amsterdam.
As you know, when I secured our Roma away tickets on Thursday 29th February, I had not booked ONE single thing - for an overseas trip in 5 days' time - as I had limited confidence we'd be successful.

By the end of that Thursday, my (23 year old) lad had researched and found:
- cheap flights from Southampton to Rome, via Geneva
- train timetables to / from Geneva airport to the city, to confirm we had time for lunch in Geneva en route
- details of a Roma airport bus service taking us right to our...
- great accommodation for two nights in Prati / Vaticano
- further great accommodation for Thursday night right by Termini, for the post-match coach drop off
- train tickets from Roma to Pisa on Friday morning (including checking for services unaffected by the Italian train strikes)
- dirt cheap flights home from Pisa to Birmingham

All I had to do was PAY for it all :lolol:

Literally the only part of our plans that I dealt with, was (with the help of @Carrot Cruncher ) navigating the nonsensical world of phone apps / split save tickets / rail cards in order to get the train fare home from Birmingham down to a sensible cost.

Generalisations are rubbish.
 




Papak

Not an NSC licker...
Jul 11, 2003
1,921
Horsham
I was brought up on scrabble - started playing as an adult with a close mate I met 20 years after leaving home who was playing several times a week. But hey ho - they were the new generation of adult scrabble players who used a plastic sheet covered in 2 letter words etc as ‘guidance’. I hated a scrabble board that was blocked in with two letter words anyway, but 2 letter words no one has ever heard of or uses outside scrabble, pah! I was having none of that and confiscated the word card during our games and no two letter words that you didn’t know the meaning of wouldn’t use in every day parlance 🙂

When my friend put down ‘Zo’ and I asked him what it meant - they said with a dead pan face, it was a sort of Himalayan yak. ‘A Himalayan Yak!’, I remonstrated - “since when have you used Himalayan Yak in a sentence?”. ”Oh“ they said, “just the other day, I was saying to someone that Himalayan Yaks are from the Himalayas”. Bosh!

Needless to say, I gradually learnt, Zo, Da, Qi etc and started using all the 2 letter words when it suited me (usually to enable laying down a much longer word.)

Years later, we developed a game of scrabble we would play all through lockdown over Facetime - my friend in Brighton with their board, me in Norfolk with mine, taking it in turns to go, each adding up both scores on our own notepads. Exactly the same rules. It worked perfectly- needless to say, my scores were much higher because my friend couldn’t block my own board with 2 or 3 letter words (which used to drive me crazy.) I could also work 3 or 4 moves in advance, setting my self up for triple word scores that my opponent couldn’t use 🙂

DR - it’s a great game, no need to dumb it down
How did you draw new letters?
 






wellquickwoody

Many More Voting Years
NSC Patron
Aug 10, 2007
13,624
Melbourne
Indeed. It is to be sold as double-sided board, with the original game on the opposite side.

Total non-story, that will be spun by the Daily ail et al, as evidence of a WoRlD GoNe WoKe.

Surprised and disappointed at @The Clamp tbh.
Funnily enough I think WOKE absolutely perfectly apt here. No winners or losers, removes confrontation, leaves everyone feeling equally valued.

Bleurgh.
 






Zeberdi

Brighton born & bred
NSC Patron
Oct 20, 2022
4,894
How did you draw new letters?
When I said we both had our own scrabble boards, that included our own bag of letters too - basically we played two games of scrabble at the same time - the competition was who finished their own board/pieces first. It worked.
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
17,132
As long as I can still play Scrabble the way I like I don't really care how others do it.
 


Papak

Not an NSC licker...
Jul 11, 2003
1,921
Horsham
When I said we both had our own scrabble boards, that included our own bag of letters too - basically we played two games of scrabble at the same time - the competition was who finished their own board/pieces first. It worked.
I had visions of you controlling the velvet bag and telling your pal "Oh, sorry, you have an X to go with your QZYKV and P"
 






hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
61,379
Chandlers Ford
Funnily enough I think WOKE absolutely perfectly apt here. No winners or losers, removes confrontation, leaves everyone feeling equally valued.

Bleurgh.
In the new game, cards which provide help, prompts and clues can be selected to match the player's chosen challenge level.
The winner is the player who completes 20 challenges, while a player loses if they have used up all the helper cards and cannot complete a goal.
:shrug:
 


The Clamp

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jan 11, 2016
24,544
West is BEST
Or possibly a generation who prefer to work in a co-operative and collaborative mannner as opposed to the winner takes all mentality that has given us the joys of neo-liberalism and disaster capitalism that are serving us so well.
Well, there is that of course.
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
17,132
Or possibly a generation who prefer to work in a co-operative and collaborative mannner as opposed to the winner takes all mentality that has given us the joys of neo-liberalism and disaster capitalism that are serving us so well.
I am sure I read something about monopoly originally being designed to be played like this.

A warning about selfish capitalism iirc.
 




Sid and the Sharknados

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 4, 2022
4,106
Darlington
I am sure I read something about monopoly originally being designed to be played like this.

A warning about selfish capitalism iirc.
I don't know if that was the intended way to play, but I've definitely heard that it's intended to demonstrate the perils of unfettered capitalism.
When I play I like to create a sustainable economy by refusing to sell or trade anything so nobody can build any houses. Just go round and around earning £200 for passing go and forking out no more than about £5 whenever you land on something (whatever the amount is before you have the full set and build anything on it).
Eventually I either win by default when everybody else gets bored, or we get kicked out of the pub because they need to close. Bloody capitalists.
 




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