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Category Archives: Other Games

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Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 21, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsFebruary 2, 2019
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Hi all, Well–Mick Greene, the fellow who runs streetplay.com, is taking a well deserved vacation this week. And, not unlike Tom Cruise’s parents in “Risky Business,” he’s left me the keys… not to the family Porsche, but to the “discussion board adminstration” area of the site! Whereas Cruise drove the Porsche into the drink and turned his house into a brothel, I went and organized this, the Skully Central discussion board! I think my efforts are more, um, noble… I’ve organized things into three main areas: 1) current discussion (this page right here) 2) archived discussion (old messages, rotated roughly every month into its own folder) 3) an area to comment on the Skully Central site itself (as opposed to reminiscing about Skully). I’ve added a message at the top of all areas to facilitate navigating Skully Central discussions. Of course, please let me know if you like what I’ve done or not, or if you have any more ideas. BTW, I’ve moved a category out of the Skully area–the Bocci section. I see the theoretical similarity between skully and bocci, but they ain’t the same sport. The section still exists; I moved it to the Special Topics area of the www.streetplay.com discussion boards.

Posted in Skully

Grew up in the Bedford Park…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 18, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 13, 2014
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Grew up in the Bedford Park area in the 60’s & 70’s and loved the game so much I had a mini one in my apt. LOL Those were great times. Hal

Posted in Skully

I don’t remember it that…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 12, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 13, 2014
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I don’t remember it that way. Each person got half the deck. Each person made their solitaire hand with only five piles in front of them. Then with the remaining cards, on the count of three, each would say spit and put a card down into the middle. Just like solitaire you would set up your hand and put cards up on those center piles until you each had nothing else to put up and then you would say spit and put out another card. There were a variety of variable rules. Should you use two hands to move cards? Use alternating black and red color scheme? and more … I don’t see what a blank pile would be?

Posted in Card Games, Girl games, Other Games

Man, was I surprised and…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 11, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 19, 2014
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Man, was I surprised and excited to find this site!! First off to Hugh McNally…You’ve done an outstanding job of putting the rules together in an articulate manner. Very professional. (It reads like it was written by a technical writer.) Anyway, I played Skully (or Skelly?) growing up in the Bronx and Queens. The game was slightly different between the neighborhoods I grew up in. In lived in the Bronx until second or third grade. I remember playing first with the broken necks off Coca-Cola or Heinekein bottles which we removed by running the neck-end of the bottles over a manhole cover. Eventually we began using the glides off of the bottoms of chairs and desks. (The desks had large glides, while the chairs had smaller ones.) I remember melting down Crayola crayons into the gliders. (It was pretty cool trying to customize the colors in your cap for that unique look.) I remember just using the plucking technique. There were two: 1)Flicking the middle finger from contact with the thumb (for power shooting, i.e.- Blasting or for long-distance shots) and 2)Flicking the index finger from underneath the thumb, while using the other three fingers as a brace (much like when shooting pool). This technique worked best for finesse shots (i.e.- hitting your opponent soft enough to keep him around for bait on your next shot, or when shooting around the Skully so that you didn’t get stuck inside, or overshoot your intened box.) After moving to Queens (Springfield Gardens area), I remember using the caps off the Dellwood milk containers. We started weighting them down with candle wax. Wax was surpassed by Playdoh or clay later. But eventually the preferred top came to be the bottoms from Push-Up ice cream. We’d weight them down with multi-colors of clay and scrape them against the ground to help smooth them down underneath. They were awesome!!! We would even put a chrome tire valve cap (taken from a car or bicycle) in the center of the cap and use it as an aiming site! The other technique that I was introduced to in Queens was called, “Flying your cap”. This was usually used for covering very long distances (i.e.- shooting back into town to become (or after becoming?) a Killer.) It could also be used to shoot at any time. (It was preferred when shooting from corner to corner across the board.) This is how we did it: 1)Place the cap in between your thumb and the first digit of your middle finger 2)While keeping your forearm parallel to the ground and against your waist, pull your arm back 3)Push your arm forward briskly, while flicking the first digit of your middle finger forward (much like when some flicks away a cigarette butt) The top should now be propelled forward as it rotates (from the flicking of the finger) and should cover a long, or short distance (dependent on the force of the forwrd arm thrust and the flick of the finger). Using this technique you can hit your opponent from long distances. (Think of the little pistol with the rifle stock that Lee Van Cleef used in “For a Few Dollars More”). I also remember the start line being far enough from the “1” box that you’d be better suited trying to “fly your cap” than to pluck it. The shooting sequence of players was determined by the closest one to the “1” box. I also remember the fun of blasting your opponent so hard that he’d start rolling on his side all the way out of town (he wasn’t allowed to stop it on his own.) I live in California (Bay Area) and am 33 now, but still love to play. I’ve shown this game to my nieces and nephews and they all love it!! I’ve also shown it to a few of my buddies and they love it too! It’s like being a kid all over again. I just moved to a smaller town outside of San Jose, and intend on teaching the kids in the neighborhood and in my new congregation how to play this truly timeless game!!! Anyone out there, please feel free to e-mail me at: thunt [at] obsidianinc [dot] com or NYsquared [at] aol [dot] com P.S.- I also have fond memories of playing Stickball (played in the street or between two walls of a school builing), Ring-O-Leavio, Punchball (with the sponge ball or Pinky), Roundup, Freeze Tag, Dodge Ball, and the favaorite with the girls…Run, Catch, and Kiss.

Posted in Ace King Queen, Bikes, Bronx, Punchball, Queens, Skully, Stickball | Tagged crayons, dodgeball, I grew up..., Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types, spongeball

Did anyone ever play a game…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 9, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 13, 2014
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Did anyone ever play a game called SPIT? You had to make 5 piles and the first person to get rid of their cards would grab the smallest pile. this would go on until the person with no cards won. It’s a game of speed. My question – what are the official rules? Is there such a thing as a blank pile? Thanks in advance.

Posted in Card Games, Girl games, Other Games

Wow, people who remember…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 9, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsJanuary 3, 2020
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Wow, people who remember Skully! Just for the record, I remember playing the game in the early 60s, probably about 1965 in Brooklyn. We lived in a dead-end kind of street (St. John’s Place) near the Botanical Gardens, so cars weren’t too much of a problem. As I remember it, only bottle caps were allowed. We called it Skully. The start point was well away from the first box. For some reason I think we referred to using the finger-flick (middle or index finger against thumb) that propelled the cap as “binking.” All the caps I remember were made with crayons on the radiators, although I do remember Mom helping us by creating a double-boiler set-up on the stove to melt wax–she did it, of course, to avoid the waxy mess we’d make on the floors. The other (even messier) method was to fill the cap with crayon chips and then balance it on a hot desk lamp. We always drew the board with chalk. The board was about 5X7 feet. At the end you became a “killer.” We also had the three hits to get someone out and the rule about getting stuck in the center box, but I’m a bit hazy about the rules. This sure brings back memories, though. Does anyone remember “pensapinkies?” did everybody call those squashy pink stickball balls by that name? I think they actually were “Pennsylvania Pinkies.” Speaking of getting Mom angry, to make stickball bats we always cut off somebody’s broom and taped the cut end with black electrician’s tape. Somebody mentioned “Coco-Leavy-o.” Somehow I remember it as just “Cocoleo” but I can’t for the life of me remember what it was. Help! Now I live in Tokyo, where nobody has any idea what I’m talking about when it comes to street games. Thanks for the memories

Posted in Brooklyn, Skully, Stickball, Street Lifestyle | Tagged chips on the ball, crayons, Does anyone remember..., Pennsy Pinkie, spaldeen types

We called it Johnny on the…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 6, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 20, 2014
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We called it Johnny on the Pony no fingers held up, just trying to break the “pony”

Posted in Johnny on the Pony, Other Games

How many of you folks ever…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 6, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsOctober 18, 2014
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How many of you folks ever played “buck-buck” ?? One team leader crouched by a fence, holding it with both hands, presenting his back parallel to the ground. The other kids on his team lined up behind him in similar fashion… The opposing team would take a running start and leap onto the backs of the crouchers, one at a time. The jumper would shout..”Buck-buck, how many horns are up??” as he (she) held up one or more fingers of a hand…..

Posted in Johnny on the Pony, Other Games

My husband told me that…

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 3, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsAugust 3, 1999
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My husband told me that a posting about a “girl game” was in the running around section, so I came looking. Not only that, but he knows I loved jacks as a kid and grew up in Chinatown, so he figured – ah – right up your alley. Anyway we played chinese jacks exactly the same way you did, only chinese mothers (and my mother) made the jacks just like little bean bags filled with rice. The rules are the same, but the materials different.

Posted in Other Games | Tagged running around

Thanks for the Skelly rules….

Streetplay Discussion Archive Posted on August 1, 1999 by Streetplay DiscussionsNovember 13, 2014
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Thanks for the Skelly rules. I realize that I joined this discussion late, however in the realm of interesting skelly caps, my father used to melt lead into soda caps for me to use in skelly. As I remember, during the game you could switch caps, and this one had a little more “staying power”.

Posted in Skully

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