The Pokemon Rule?! More Schools Should Do This!!!
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ก.พ. 2025
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And I’m a bloody 90’s kid.
Never had that problem, for some reason all school I went to were cool with all cars games being play, at recess.
When I was in middle school I gave away a binder of Pokemon cards.. so many first editions I'll never get back. But at least I still have my Pocket Monster Abra figure still in package. I'm taking that to the grave with me 😂
I was in early elementary school when Pokemon first hit the states. My school had a rule where if you were caught with cards you were handed a pair of scissors and had to cut all your cards into pieces over the trash can. Pokemon cards were the first time I remember this rule being put into effect. But I also remember such a thing happening multiple times later with YGO, MTG, even baseball, and just regular playing cards. So I don't know if this rule was originally made for Pokemon cards or came from an earlier time. I also don't know if any parents complained or if this was just that one school I went to or if it was a district wide thing, because by the time I got into Middle School no one was into any sort of card games, and this carried on into High School. Not that we were into the actual card games themselves, no one knew how to play, so we just collected, traded, and sometimes fight because some kid had a card of a Pokemon that was in the anime so that was seen as worth breaking a nose over.
I played MTG modern in school at lunch, no agreement needed, but I can see how for younger kids it would be needed
We had a whole self imposed trading and betting rules passed down by the bigger kids so we wouldn't loose all of our cards, we also had different games to bet cards (or not) if you didn't think you had a good functioning deck or you had lost your better cards and it's not like you could only get shitty cards playing those, because the games where fun to us we would play anyways even we had good decks
In my school (at least from 2000 to 2011) they would literally sell booster packs at the school store, the school was super chill with cards, the only time they got invilved was to tell us to always take our cards to recess so they wouldn't get stolen while recess was happening, also we, the children, decided to ban selling cards for money, the only way of acquiring specific cards was trade or betting them with some rules, no betting more than 5 cards at a time, both players had to agree to which cards were getting betted on both sides, you couldn't ask for more than three cards from the other kid for one of yours, if you didn't think your card was worth 3 whatever cards the other kid had you weren't betting it or trading it
Ps. ah yeah, and the tcgs that were popular there were yugioh up to 2009-ish and dbz cards from around 2007 to 2011, also, we had different games that could be played with any card that you could also bet, the game was there so that even if you lost your good cards you could still get more (or if you where more of a collector of cards than a player of the games) which ment you wouldn't just get shitty cards from people on a losing streak there (and the game was also fun so even with a decent deck and liking the original games we would play anyways)
If it’s done right, these games can be incorporated into lessons. A lot of modern teachers want to throw the whole testing thing out the window and use demonstrations of proficiency of knowledge as testing rather than traditional pen to paper. But alas due to curriculums and lack of funding, this is not possible yet.
MTG was my card game, and it was my main social outlet other than Halo lan parties. If it wasn't so expensive, maybe I'd still be playing.