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better
than x games
cameo appearance by Todd Sonneborn
23 November 1999
It would
be hard not to notice the recent trend toward alternative
sports. Competitions like the X-Games and the Gravity
Games now celebrate sports like sky surfing, street luge,
bike vert, snowboarding big air, speed climbing, and
skier slopestyle. People got bored with the endless rules
and lack of creativity in traditional sports like
baseball and football. Can you blame them?
In our
cubicle we've taken this notion a step farther...
probably too far (as I'm prone to do), but that's what
traditional sports needed and exactly what cubes need
too. A little out-of-the-box thinking keeps things
"balanced". Kristen wrote about the stuff visitors see in our cube: the toys,
marshmallow bunnies and the like... decorations which
make "the cube" a little less square.
As
whirlygirl's main content provider, Kristen's
claim-to-fame, highly visual learning/thinking/writing
style overlooks some of the greatest cube-relief stuff in
our little "cubey" lives here. That's where I
(today's guest lecturer, cameo appearer, substitute
teacher, or whatever I'm called) come in. I must (just
this once) defend Kristen and her visually-intensive
thinking... it is not flawed for her eyes to miss the
below list of ridiculous games and contests. Much of this
stuff is done in such a way that it specifically evades
optic nerves, something that's second nature to anyone
who's worked in a cubicle before.
The rules
to all games are painfully simple, but the strategies and
execution can be developed into a true art-form. These
contests may be adopted into the X-Games next millennium,
and I assure you that Gold and Silver are already spoken
for.
HIDE THE MUSTARD |
Rules: |
Hide packets of
mustard on your opponent's half of the
cube. |
Strategies: |
More packets = fun.
More time passing without finding mustard
= more fun.
Tape them to the inside of your
opponent's closed umbrella = most fun.
Hiding packets in places with high
tear/break/burst risk = don't even joke
about it. |
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BURIED IN A CHAIR |
Rules: |
Cram random
(non-mustard) stuff under the upholstered
cushion of your opponent's seat. |
Strategies: |
Broken Compact
disks = fun.
Bigger stuff = more fun.
Whole empty soda cans = most fun.
When cubemate is away stuff chair, and
leave chair facing in a direction that
best hides the large lump during the
opponent's returning-to-cube approach. |
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DEMO3,
S-P-I-N-A-B-I-F-I-D-A, I HATE THIS PLACE |
Rules: |
Write one of these
three phrases in your opponent's half. |
Strategies: |
Don't let them see
you write it. Spend lots of time writing
it in very ornate lettering. More ornate
= more fun. Consider different mediums
such as crayons or watercolors. Writing
on important paperwork = most fun. Try to
write these random phrases so ornately
that the opponent feels compelled to keep
and cherish it as beautiful art. |
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CASUAL RECYCLER |
Rules: |
Pretend to recycle
your opponent's important papers. |
Strategies: |
You've got to be
GOOD to make 'em fall for this one after
the first few times... so be creative. |
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SEE YOU TOMORROW |
Rules: |
After normal
business hours, a bell occasionally rings
on the overhead sound system to alert
night staff of incoming calls. If you
hear a bell during the day, be the first
to say "see you tomorrow..." |
Strategies: |
Earlier in the day
= fun.
Standing up to leave = more fun.
On Friday saying "see you next
week" = most fun. |
Bonus: |
If the bell sounds
where you can both hear it, but you are
not within reasonable voice range... call
the opponent to deliver the message. |
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WALLET SOCCER |
Rules: |
Get your opponent's
wallet onto the floor and kick it. |
Strategies: |
Time it so that you
are not seen kicking the wallet, but
he/she IS seen bending over or chasing it
across the floor. |
Bonus: |
Kick it through
closing elevator doors. |
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