ChildrenOfChildren:The Pilots, Anchors & Monsters Game: Difference between revisions
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:"I hit you with a sword, like swish slice!" | :"I hit you with a sword, like swish slice!" | ||
:"Nuh uh! I'm made of sooper strong alien armor and stuff." | :"Nuh uh! I'm made of sooper strong alien armor and stuff." | ||
:"Damn! (kisses | :"Damn! (kisses Lily on the cheek) HA! Now it's a lightsaber!" | ||
:"No fair! Kissing another girl doesn't count!" | :"No fair! Kissing another girl doesn't count!" | ||
:"MOM! Does kissing another girl count?!" | :"MOM! Does kissing another girl count?!" | ||
:"Yeah, | :"Yeah, Missus Smith, it should count!" | ||
:"...did you both like it?" | :"...did you both like it?" | ||
:"Yeah!" | :"Yeah!" | ||
:" | :"...it counted for Anna and Meredith, so it should count here." | ||
:"Aw, man!" | :"Aw, man!" | ||
Revision as of 17:57, 13 September 2008
Children's Games and other Disturbing Things
The kids of the resistance have taken to playing a Lets Pretend game known as "Pilots, Anchors and Monsters" - this is pretty much exactly what it says on the tin:
- "I hit you with a sword, like swish slice!"
- "Nuh uh! I'm made of sooper strong alien armor and stuff."
- "Damn! (kisses Lily on the cheek) HA! Now it's a lightsaber!"
- "No fair! Kissing another girl doesn't count!"
- "MOM! Does kissing another girl count?!"
- "Yeah, Missus Smith, it should count!"
- "...did you both like it?"
- "Yeah!"
- "...it counted for Anna and Meredith, so it should count here."
- "Aw, man!"
They also frequently beg the Pilots to play as the monsters, because "You get to pilot in real life, sooo..."
- An extra Privileged Interlude to the first player who's 3+ Trauma pilot's... realistic... depiction of the monster makes the "Pilot" and/or "Anchor" cry. --Bliss Authority
Naturally, some of the tweens who still play use it as an excuse for sexual experimentation, of the variety where a "Pilot" will exclaim "...oh no, only my ultimate form will save me now!" with a lecherous grin, and the also-grinning "Anchor" will start pawing on them. At least.
Unusually for this sort of thing, Sara has few problems with the "clean" version of the game - they're kids, they're having fun, they're working out thier fears of the aliens in a safe way; let them have thier fun, so long as it doesn't get more heavy than pecking random friends on the cheek.
I suggest that Archer, on the other hand, would probably vehemently object - as his famous excess of gravitas rears it's head. --Bliss Authority