I've occasionally had quizzing elbow.
I think the real dangers are psychological - you begin to live your whole life in a solipsistic quizbubble.
SWP finger
- Istenem
- Senior Member
- Posts: 5918
- Joined: Sat Apr 30, 2005 2:42 pm
- Location: the nation's capital
- Contact:
roberto la vigna wrote:I've occasionally had quizzing elbow.
I think the real dangers are psychological - you begin to live your whole life in a solipsistic quizbubble.
i once argued that soliptic should be the agent adjective for solipsis but it turns out to be a(n unusual greek) word, i was convinced that i was right then too.
my finger has healed a bit now but call(o)us jokes are still valid.
nobody ever wins on those things.
Continuous playing of the Jiggy Bank section of the revised Ant and Dec game can surely lead to friction burns at the very least. However it remains rewarding - in contrast to many other games, it doesn't making disappointing prizes a feature of the game - last night I was awarded the two highest prizes available from the 25 in the end game - £12 and £6 on the £1 game. I don't expect to see a £40+ prize again but there are definitely a lot of inferior games out there eager for your coinage.
Unfortunately I've only seen it twice in London village, although I did blag an £8 on one of them. My arm ached thoroughly after Jiggy Banking (not cockney rhyming slang). I was slightly tempted just to let the clock run down as I didn't really think the bonus points were worth the arm-ache...Nil Satis wrote:Continuous playing of the Jiggy Bank section of the revised Ant and Dec game can surely lead to friction burns at the very least. However it remains rewarding - in contrast to many other games, it doesn't making disappointing prizes a feature of the game - last night I was awarded the two highest prizes available from the 25 in the end game - £12 and £6 on the £1 game. I don't expect to see a £40+ prize again but there are definitely a lot of inferior games out there eager for your coinage.