Is flipping pogs considered a traditional game?
>>48308518
Yes
>>48308518
Yes, but there's not much to talk about beyond hoping they make a comeback.
>>48308518
I think you mean "Milk Bottle Caps"...?
>>48309073
Post your fav pog
That brings me back.
Do tazos count?
>always playing for keeps
>going all in and losing my whole stack
That's when I stopped playing games of chance. Fuck you Fred.
>>48308518
Day sexy RIPPER.
>>48309670
You need to diversify your bonds, nigga.
>>48309670
A lesson for a lifetime
>>48309137
>>48309750
Better learn it at 7 than at 30-something, so yeah.
>>48308518
>pogs
What are you, like, 40 years old?
Okay, so let's list all the types of pogs we can remember and what house rules we remember from them.
Rippers were slammers like ninja stars that shredded your pogs. We weren't allowed to use them at y school because they were 'weapons', but we were okay with that since they tore pogs apart.
Fat Boys were especially thick slammers. No special rules, but they looked cool.
Poisons were labaled as such and usually had a skull. When you flipped one of those, you got to take the closest pog to it even if it wasn't flipped.
Magic 8 Balls had pool balls on them and if you flipped one, you got to keep every pog that was touching it, even if it wasn't slipped.
Jumping Jeddy Eddy had a character named Eddy on them, usually doing something sports related. If you flipped one of them, you could put it back into the stack, but had a chance to tiddly-wink flip a single pog of your choice.