Archive for the ‘Art And Entertainment’ Category

Entertainment Rooms

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Morgan Kennedy asked:


Entertainment rooms should have the right equipments and furniture such as a nice comfortable couch, a big screen TV, and video games to keep guests feel at home. Check out this list of tips on how to build your own entertainment room.

Buy a quality television. If you are going to buy a TV for your entertainment room, there are many stores that can cater to every budget. There are many choices out there for your preference, you can choose from flat panel to tube style or projection, DLP to plasma, full screen to wide screen, or a small functional TV up to a 65” or even a full drop down screen and home projector. Don’t forget you always have the choice of high definition. Online stores often have a good selection when it comes to buying flat screen TVs; additionally the prices are very good when you shop online. Brand names also contribute to the quality and reliability of the equipment. Sharp, Sony, Samsung, Toshiba, and Panasonic are some well known brands that have good quality TV’s for competitive prices.

Boost your sound system. Having a killer sound system is an important factor in any entertainment rooms. You can choose from a variety of brands from Altec to Bose. Just make sure it fits your room. Whether you bought it from online or local stores, the most important thing is the quality of the equipment.

Choose nice furniture. Entertainment rooms should have a comfortable place to sit and sleep. You can choose from leather to micro fiber furniture. A chaise lounge or recliners are always a good choice as well.

Add some games. Video games like Playstation 3, Wii and Xbox 360 can be set up in your entertainment room. Other games like dart board, ping pong and pool table can be added. These types of games will surely entertain your guests.



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Sudoku – A Riddle That Begs To Be Solved

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Charles Hawkins asked:


The Sudoku riddle has hit worldwide mass media and newspapers with such a considerable impact, that it has to be the puzzle game promotion of the century. But what is it that give rise to drawing numbers into small boxes so extremely addictive?

One part of the mix has definitely to be outright simplicity of the mystery. The directions of Sudoku are so easy to grasp that any person can start solving almost without delay.Yet complete mastery of the game call for serious extent of puzzle solving and patience. A Sudoku brainteaser can also be made so incomprehensible that even a virtuoso could have a hard time solving it.

Contrary to what many would believe when they initially see a Sudoku enigma, this brain-teasing exercise doesn’t require markedly high understanding of math. It is more a matter of common sense and the numeral characters could, in fact, be changed with any other symbol.

A lesson in determination

Although it might seem ridiculous to draw a parallel between sitting in the sofa playing Sudoku and throwing darts, bear with me for a second and I will get to the point.

I recall when I was a kid and we spent the vacation at our cottage in the countryside. One day my sibling and I found an old darts game – not like the extravagant ones they use in indoors dart competitions, but more of a robust “outdoors” (or whatever the term is) type of dartboard with digits from one on the outside to ten in the bulls eye, and rather compact and firm darts.

Neither of us where very good at throwing darts, so it was a good decision we hung the dart target on the outside wall of an old shed. After a while though, I managed to get quite a good score – 42 with five darts.

Luck had much to do with it of course, but now something interesting happened. My sister would not quit before she had gotten at least the same score as me!

I think she fired away at that dart board for a pair of hours without interruption, and had she been a character in a comic she would probably certainly have been portrayed with a black rain cloud over her head, so to speak. It started to get dark before she finally had flattened my record and could allow herself to quit.

It is genuinely startling to observe such determination.

Although having very little to do with Sudoku puzzles per se, I think the same kind of driving influence is also partially “blamable” for the addictiveness of the Sudoku brainteaser.

Most might love a test, provided that there is really a somewhat sensible possibility to crop up “victorious” in the end. When tackling a fittingly tricky Sudoku enigma a participant can sometimes enter almost a trance like state where he or she just can’t put down the pen before they have crushed the Sudoku contest. Much in the same way as it happend in that dart game many years ago.

So as you see, the simple goal of breaking a record or solving a puzzle – although very basic things – can have a profound effect on a persons reactions.

This is all good, as Sudoku is a very low-cost hobby that definitely provides a good work out for the brain.However, should something very catch fire in the vincinity or if the neighbor is drowning – by all means put that Sudoku puzzle aside for just a few minutes.



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The Simple Rules for Playing Darts

Monday, July 14th, 2008

Barney Garcia asked:


The game of darts had its origins in England and may have first been made from the cross section of a tree or even the bottoms of wine casks which was why it was sometimes named “butts”.

Though the game of darts can be played in many different ways, the circular game board is always a necessary component of play. It is a game which is played competitively, as well as in pubs and private homes. The board is usually made of sisal, a strong, durable fiber, with each section lined with wire. The standard dart board is hung so that the bull’s eye is five feet, eight inches from the floor, and the throwing line is seven feet, nine and a quarter inches from the board. For casual play these rules do not have to be set in stone as people are playing just for fun and social interaction.

The rules for playing darts are not complicated. There are usually two teams, each made up of two or more players. Each person is allowed nine throws as a pre-game warm-up. To determine which team or player will go first a dart is thrown by a person from each team. The closest throw to the bull’s eye is the team that will go first. When his turn comes, each player will throw three darts. Then the other side will also throw three darts. If someone accidentally crosses over or steps on the dart throwing line or oche in the course of play; the throw is disqualified and that person must wait for his turn come around again to resume playing.

Darts must remain on the dartboard for five seconds to be counted and if sticks into another dart or causes it to fall of the board it does not count. Darts are scored in the following way: in the wedge, the amount posted on the outer ring; in the double ring (the outer, narrow ring) twice the number hit; in the triple ring (the inner, narrow ring) three time the number hit. Bull’s eye (outer bull) is twenty five points; the double bull’s eye (the inner bull’s eye) is fifty points.

Many people enjoy darts and even have their own special sets of darts, imbued with almost supernatural powers, that they will not play without. Dart players are a fun-loving bunch of people who enjoy the company of others in a fun yet mildly competitive way.



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Entertaining Friends in Basement

Friday, January 26th, 2007

Mitch Johnson asked:


Most of the boys have a loud nature. They like to wrestle and tumble and make noises. They cannot sit quietly for so long. So it is always necessary to keep some mattress on the basement ground to prevent the boys from hurting themselves. Find out in this article what are the other necessary things in your youngsters fun game.

Less noisy but still lots of fun is a “Jar Ring Toss.” A board about twenty-eight inches square is prepared by driving at an angle twenty-three nails three inches long part way into it or by screwing into it little right-angle hooks like those used to hold curtain rods. Each hook is given a value of twenty-five, twenty, fifteen, ten or five points. Figures can be cut from a calendar and pasted on.

The board can be hung against the wall or set on a table. Its center should be about shoulder high. The players stand ten feet from the board. Each is given twelve rubber jar rings, which he tries to throw onto the nails or hooks having the highest numbers. The players throw three times in a play and rotate four times. It is well to mark the rings with crayon or paint so that each person may identify his own in counting the final score. “Miss the Bell” is a game that’s fun and easy to arrange for. A bell is suspended in a hoop about eight inches in diameter and a small ball is given to the players. They take turns tossing the ball through the hoop without causing the bell to ring. One point is scored each time the ball goes through and three points are scored if the bell does not ring.

“Basement Button Snap” is our glorified version of tiddlywinks. Draw two chalk lanes about a foot wide along the floor and supply each player with two buttons. One he places on the staring line. With the other he snaps the first one down his lane to the goal as soon as the signal is given. Snapping consists of pressing the edge of one button with the other in such a way that the under one flies ahead. If a button leaves its lane it must be put back at the starting line and snapped on its way again. Obstacles over which the buttons are snapped add interest to the game. The player who first drives his button to the goal wins the game.

“Barrel Toss” is a good game for a change. The players stand about twenty feet away from a barrel and throw stones or wooden blocks into it. Each may have five throws and a point may be awarded for each stone or block that goes in. The throwing line may be put farther back when the players are experts.

Boys always like to wrestle and tumble and practice rolls and falls. These lads will have endless fun if you put an old mattress on the basement floor. The boys will need no rules or encouragement to start their fun. They’ll soon create their own contests and maybe get Dad to join the fun.

For children old enough to play with sharp-pointed darts, here’s a homemade game that is fun. Make three darts by cutting the heads from matches. Slit one end so that a piece of folded paper about two and one-half inches square can be slipped into the slit. Into the other end of the match force the eye-end of a large sewing needle. A circular target whose outside circle is not more than fifteen inches in diameter is drawn on a wall board or a piece of heavy cardboard and hung shoulder high on the wall.

The players stand about eight feet away from the target and each tries to throw the three darts so as to pierce the target as near the bulls-eye as possible. For each dart that sticks firmly in a space the player receives the number of points marked in that space. Nothing is counted for darts touching a line.

Turn your youngsters loose downstairs where the walls won’t mar and the floors won’t scuff. The kids will have fun and you will enjoy the quiet order of your living rooms.



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