brainwane: My smiling face, including a small gold bindi (Default)
[personal profile] brainwane
I grew up understanding "golf" as "a game rich people play while doing low-key industry networking." Indeed I know at least one executive woman who learned how to play golf tolerably well in order to acquit herself well when invited to play by colleagues, clients, etc.

Here in NYC it feels like game nights/board game afternoons are the golf of the programming class. It's kind of assumed that you can play socially, there are gaming circles that also end up serving as industry networking. And you can invite a coworker to a game night and they'll understand that it's social, and not a date, and it's ok if they play really badly as long as they show good sportsmanship.

Is it like this in other cities too?

Edited to add: By the way, I am someone who loves a few board/card games and doesn't love most of them and is willing to play many of them if that's what everyone else in a group of visitors wants to do, and I believe I recognize many of their virtues and their downsides. What I'm specifically curious about is what other cities have this same kind of scene.

(no subject)

Date: 2019-02-21 04:43 am (UTC)
luinied: Anthy is great at tea and subtext and also sick of gender. I'm glad she eventually gets to see more of the upsides of being stuck on Earth. (focused)
From: [personal profile] luinied
It definitely is not in Seattle (while going out for drinks with coworkers still is), at least in my experience.

It may be in Chicago? I've seen some hints that suggest yes, but I need more data.
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