Indeed, it is very easy to answer this question. Ask a chess player on purpose. He will clearly answer chess, and his teammates will say the same thing.
Or ask a Go player. It doesn\’t matter who they are. They will tell you that Go is the one and only game and that no other game is as good. Field hockey players will say the same thing. They will say that field hockey is the best game in the world and that it cannot be played any other way. Rugby players, for example, are not worth writing about. Rugby players will claim this about their game, just as dominoes players will not concede it.
There are 100 people, 100 tastes, 100 interests, 100 opinions. Two people with the same thing can get together, and if someone else joins them, a circle is instantly formed, which can grow and spread throughout the world. So an association is formed and dues are paid.
We play games from childhood until we die. The only difference is the age, or the player, not the game itself. Indeed, boys and girls will still be playing with different toys in nursing homes at the age of five. It is the games rather than the traditional toys that are on the agenda here. I saw it with my own eyes when I was volunteering at a nursing home, of all places. In the nursing home, old ladies would play the “No Angry Men” game, and the old men would play with their cards. On rare occasions, I have even seen chess pieces placed on a chess board. Well, people who play don\’t get angry. It\’s the same at any age.
Do you, dear readers, sometimes think back to your childhood and your toys? Who wouldn\’t want to be reminded of them? The oldest grandpas will always remember Mercury kits that may no longer exist. And grandmothers will surely remember their dolls, which at the time could not yet talk or pee. And they will remember the stories of their grandmothers who only had pieces of wood and old cloth instead of dolls. Progress is also being made in the field of games and toys of all kinds.