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Oyceter ([personal profile] oyceter) wrote2007-02-22 10:17 am
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More Initials

More amusing moments from multiple games of Initials (some already written up here):

Rachel: GM. With an asterisk, as it is not the entity's legal name, but is the most commonly used one.

I eventually established that GM was female, dead, fictional, and written about in a language that wasn't English but was European. After much querying (I apparently cannot remember half the countries in Europe), it was established that the work was oral and probably from Norway. ("Is it Norse?" I asked. "No. Yes! Wait. Uh, what country is Norse?" asked Rachel. "NORWAY!" I said, while trying not to fall off my chair giggling. Rachel notes from my side that she has a master's degree, but thankfully not in European studies.)

"Wait. Is this Beowulf? It's GRENDEL'S MOTHER!" I guessed.

"Yes!"

"Beowulf is ENGLISH! Not Norse! English! OMG! ENGLISH!" I squawked indignantly. (Rachel notes here that she had to spell "squawked" for me.)

To confound Rachel, I came up with another asterisked name, GA. I helpfully gave her the clue that it was not Grendel's Aunt. (It was actually the Godolphin Arabian.)

Initials, as previously noted, is a very fun game when one plays with manga characters. Also, my sister and B are telepathic, as Rachel or me would frequently come up with initials that were directly guessed without any clues. I think the most impressive was B guessing PT Barnum, only knowing he was a dead American businessman.

The more fun manga characters included KB ("Male or female?" I asked. "Uhhhhhhhh..."), TA ("Dead or alive?" "Uhhhh...." "Human or non-human?" "Uhhhhh...." to which I immediately asked, "Is he a shinigami?"), and JD ("Is he hot?" asked Rachel. "Uh. Technically, I guess? But really no.").

One that went on for half an hour involved IC, an alive fictional female character in a manga and anime, in which the manga series was written first. "Are there embryos dripping blood?" I asked jokingly.

"Yes!" said Rachel. There was also amnesia of sorts, eye trauma, robots of sorts, non-slashy brothers, scientific experimentation but no heads in jars (that Rachel remembers), and parallel Earths.

The answer is spoilery, so if you're guessing please spoiler protect by enclosing stuff in [span style="color:#666666;background-color:#666666"] [/span] except with <> for the [].

[identity profile] almeda.livejournal.com 2007-02-22 02:40 am (UTC)(link)
We call that game Botticelli -- though it may be a variant of what you're playing.
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[identity profile] coffeeandink.livejournal.com 2007-02-22 02:58 am (UTC)(link)
KB: Kanzeon Bosatsu

TA: Tsuzuki Asato

JD: beats me.

IC: Izumi Curtis.
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[identity profile] coffeeandink.livejournal.com 2007-02-22 02:59 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, duh: JD: Jezebel Disraeli, who is just too creepy to be hot, and for a character by that mangaka, that's really saying something.

[identity profile] rachelmanija.livejournal.com 2007-02-22 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
All correct, including JD. You are so smart! Oyce mentions that it took her aout 40 minutes to guess IC, though I think she was misled by her early question as to whether scientific experimentation was a large part of the story.

PS. The very first set of initials which inauguarted the game was DW, provided by Oyce and guessed by myself. Male, connected to fandom, not someone I know personally (because he is fictional.)

[identity profile] anneth.livejournal.com 2007-02-22 09:28 am (UTC)(link)
Technically, Beowulf is Anglo-saxon, or Old English, and a distinct language from modern English... but definitely not Norse!

In any event, a version of this game we used to play in high school went like this - 'one E on VVG': one ear on Vincent van Gogh. Or, maybe, three Cs on the TL: three colors on the traffic light. Whatever combo of initials you can come up with!

[identity profile] matt-ruff.livejournal.com 2007-02-22 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Technically, Beowulf is Anglo-saxon, or Old English, and a distinct language from modern English...

Yeah, I took a semester of Old English at Cornell, and IIRC, it qualified as a foreign language for majors that had a foreign language requirement.