If you’ve never played it, Jenga is a game where each player starts with a tower of wooden blocks in crisscrossing layers of three blocks. Each turn, you take one block out of your tower, and put it on top. The towers get taller and less stable every turn. The first person whose tower collapses is the loser.
I’ve played Jenga, but never with a tower each—always with a single shared tower that we took turns trying to take/replace one block from.
Not that this is in any way material to your point, I just found it distracting for the central metaphor to be a near-miss at familiarity.
I’ve played Jenga, but never with a tower each—always with a single shared tower that we took turns trying to take/replace one block from.
Not that this is in any way material to your point, I just found it distracting for the central metaphor to be a near-miss at familiarity.
It’s been so long that I actually played Jenga that I actually forgot that you play with the same tower! I’ll fix later. Thanks.