And now for something completely different
I've always wanted to use that line. Actually,
now I've used it, I feel a great void has
opened in my soul. Oh, what to do now that
my purpose in life has been fulfilled?
(Stay off
the plum duff, there's a good chap. Ed) Sorry.
Anyway, on to something completely different.
Something that's not PD at all, in fact. (But we
couldn't think of any other place to put it. Tch.
So it's ended up in Public House.)
(But what is
it? Readers' voices) Erm, it's homegrown
game, actually. A stock market simulator. No,
no, don't laugh - it's really quite jolly. Now let
me introduce it properly.
You're a broker out to make a killing in an
ordinary day's wheeling and dealing at the
stock market. After you've grasped the
fundamentals of moving huge amounts of cash
around in exchange for shares in ostensibly
clever companies, you'll have a fine old time
with this sadly-too-long-to-go-on-the-tape-otherwise-we'd-have-had-it reader game.
Despite the plodding response and overall
shabbiness of the presentation, it's a horribly
involved and surprisingly gripping foray into the
world of high finance. I mean, I like it, and I
don't even own a pair of red braces. Obviously
Mini Stocks is not a game you can sit down in
front of and get stuck into straight away, but if
you keep at it (and follow the instructions,
natch) you'll soon find yourself bouncing up
and down in your seat, shouting 'Sell! Sell!
Sell!' and pretending your empty Milk Tray box
is a carphone. A fine alternative to mindless
action games and an equally fine
alternative to post-Christmas
dinner Trivial Pursuit. Ho ho ho!