Tag (game)
Children playing a version of tag | |
Players | 2 or more |
---|---|
Age range | 3+ |
Setup time | 0 to 1 minutes |
Playing time | No limit |
Random chance | Low |
Skill(s) required | Running, stalking, hiding, observation |
Tag (also known as it, tip you're it or tig [in regions of Britain],[1][2] and many other names[3]) is a playground game that involves one or more players chasing other players in an attempt to "tag" or touch them, usually with their hands. There are many variations; most forms have no teams, scores, or equipment. Usually when a person is tagged, the tagger says, "Tag, you're it".
Basic rules
A group of players (two or more) decide who is going to be "it", often using a counting-out game such as eeny, meeny, miny, moe. The player selected to be "it" then chases the others, attempting to get close enough to "tag" one of them (touching them with a hand) while the others try to escape. A tag makes the tagged player "it" - in some variations, the previous "it" is no longer "it" and the game can continue indefinitely while in others, both players remain "it" and the game ends when all players have become "it".[4]
There are many variants which modify the rules for team play, or place restrictions on tagged players' behavior. A simple variation makes tag an elimination game, so those tagged drop out of play.[5] Some variants have a rule preventing a player from tagging the person who has just tagged them (known as "no tags-back", "no returns", or "can't tag your master").[6]
Base and truce terms
Players may be safe from being tagged under certain circumstances: if they are within a pre-determined area, off the ground, or when touching a particular structure. Traditional variants are Wood tag, Iron tag, and Stone tag, when a player is safe when touching the named material.[6] This safe zone has been called a "gool" or "Dell",[7][8] probably a corruption of "goal".[9] The term "gool" was first recorded in print in Massachusetts in the 1870s, and is common in the northern states of the US. Variants include gould, goul, and ghoul, and alternatives include base and home.[10] In the United Kingdom, the base is frequently known as "den". In Canada, the state or home base of being immune from tagging is known as "times" or "T."
Players may also make themselves safe from being tagged by the use of a truce term.
Bans and restrictions
Tag and other chasing games have been banned in some schools in the United States and United Kingdom due to concerns about injuries, complaints from children that it can lead to harassment and bullying, and that there is an aspect to the game that possesses an unhealthily predatory element to its nature.[11][12][13] In 2008, a 10-year-old boy in Omaha, Nebraska died from brain injuries suffered from falling onto a metal pole while playing tag,[14] and a school dinner lady in Dorset was left partially paralyzed after a 13-year-old boy playing tag ran into her in 2004.[15] Her claim for damage was rejected by three Court of Appeal judges, who ruled that the boy had not broken any school rules by playing the game.[16]
A principal who banned tag in their school criticized the game for creating a "self-esteem issue" in nominating one child as a victim, and noted that the oldest and biggest children usually dominated the game.[17] A dislike of elimination games is another reason for banning tag.[18] In some schools only supervised tag is allowed, sometimes with a type of tagging called butterfly tagging—a light tap on the shoulders, arms or upper back.[19]
The president of the US National Association for Sport and Physical Education said that "Tag games are not inherently bad ... teachers must modify rules, select appropriate boundaries and equipment, and make sure pupils are safe. Teachers should emphasize tag games that develop self-improvement, participation, fair play, and cooperation."[18] The UK Local Government Association encouraged the playing of tag in 2008, saying that children are overprotected ("wrapped in cotton wool").[20]
Variants
British bulldogs
The game "British bulldogs" (sometimes also called Bullrush, Cat and Mouse, Cats and Mice, Sharks and Minnows, or Spiders and Flies) is mainly played in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and other Commonwealth countries. It is banned from many schools. One or two players start as the "bulldogs", who stand in the middle of the play area, while the other players stand at one end of the area. The aim is to run from one end of the area to the other without being caught by the bulldogs. When a player is caught, they become a bulldog themselves. The winner is the last player "free".[21]
Chain tag
This is a variant of Build Ups in which each person to be caught joins hands with "it," and the chain thus formed must chase the others as a pair. As more people are caught they too join hands with the "it" players, forming a lengthening chain. This variation is also called Blob. Only those at the ends of the chain are able to catch someone, as they are the only ones with a free hand. A variant has chains of four splitting in two.[22]
Duck, duck, goose
In this game, usually played by young children, the players sit in a circle facing inward. One player, the "picker" or "fox", walks around tapping or pointing to each player in turn, calling each of them a "duck", until finally announcing one to be the "goose". The goose then rises and runs around the circle in the same direction as the picker, attempting to tag that player before they can sit back down in the vacated spot. In Minnesota, this game is referred to as "Duck, duck, gray duck".[23]
Freeze tag
Also known as Stuck in the Mud, Scarecrow, Sticky-Glue, Zombie Tag, Ice-and-Water (in Asia) or Ice-and-Fire (in Malaysia), players who are tagged are "stuck in the mud" or "frozen" and must stand in place with their arms stretched out until they are unfrozen. An unstuck player can perform an action to unfreeze them, such as tagging them, crawling between their legs,[22] or "flushing" them by hitting their outstretched hand ("Toilet tag").
Kiss chase
Kiss chase, also referred to as Catch and Kiss, is a tag variant in which tagging is performed by kissing.[4] All members of one gender are "it" at once and chase players of the opposite sex until everyone is caught, then the roles are reversed.[24] A variant is that the player chosen to be "it" will, with assistance from players of the same gender, chase all members of the opposite sex and kiss one of them, who is then "it" on behalf of the other gender.
Last tag
Last tag was played in the early 20th century, when it was a way to say goodbye when leaving school for home. A player tags another and makes them "it" before leaving on their way home. There is no tagging back. It was a point of honor not to be left with the last tag. If a player is unable to tag anyone by the end of the game, they became "it" the next day.[25]
Octopus tag
Octopus tag is a mix between Red Rover and tag.[26] "It," or "octopus," attempts to tag the other players. The playing field is known as the ocean. The players, or "fish," line up along one side of the ocean. When the Octopus calls out, "Come fishies come!", they try to run to the other side without getting tagged. In a variation, once the fish run to the other side without getting tagged, the game pauses until the octopus starts it again. Upon getting tagged the fish become "seaweed" and must freeze or sit where they were tagged, but they can wave their arms around and assist the Octopus in tagging other fish within their reach. The last fish to be tagged becomes the next Octopus. This game can also be played in the water and then it is called Sharks and Minnows.
Shipwrecked
Also known as budge, one player is it and tries to tag the other players. There are safe zones, such as circles, but their number is one fewer than the number of the other players. A player is not allowed to enter an occupied safe zone. If a player is tagged, that player becomes "it".[22]
Variants exist where to unfreeze someone, the player must also call out a certain TV show ("TV tag"), sports team, or object. Once called, the thing can no longer be used to unfreeze someone.
Team tag
Cops and Robbers
Cops and Robbers, sometimes called "Jail", "Jail tag", "Team tag", "Chase", "Police and Thief", "Prisoner's Base", "Jailbreak", "Release" (in South Philly), "Releaseo" or "Manhunt",[25] has players split into two teams: Cops and Robbers.
A. M. Burrage calls this version of the game "Smee" in his 1931 ghost story of the same name.[27] The cops, who are in pursuit of robbers (the team being chased), arrest the robbers by tagging and putting them in jail. Robbers can stage a jailbreak by tagging one of the prisoners without getting tagged themselves.[28] The game ends if all the robbers are in jail. In a variant, the robbers have five minutes to hide before being hunted, and only one jailbreak may be allowed per robber.
Zombie tag
Humans vs. Zombies is a survival game of tag, where "human" players fight off increasingly large numbers of "zombies"; if a human is "turned" (i.e. tagged), then that player becomes a zombie in turn. At the game's beginning, there are only one or two zombies; the zombies multiply by tagging humans, turning them into zombies after a period of one hour. Humans can defend themselves from zombies by using socks, marshmallows, Nerf Blasters or any other toys deemed safe and appropriate; if a zombie is hit by one of these methods of defense, they are stunned (not allowed to interact with the game in any way) for fifteen minutes. The goal of the zombies is to turn all the humans; the humans, meanwhile, must outlast all the zombies.
Manhunt
Manhunt is a mixture of hide and seek and tag, often played during the night. One person is it, while the other players have to hide. Then, the person who is it tries to find and tag them. The game is over when all players are out. Manhunt is sometimes played with teams. In one variant there is a home base in which a player is safe. That version ends when all players who are not safe are out.
Prisoner's Base
In Prisoner's Base, each team starts in a chain, holding hands, with one end of the chain touching the base. The end two players on each team break from the chain and try to tag each other, taking them to their base if they do. The end pair progressively break from the chain and join the tagging. As with Cops and Robbers, prisoners can be freed by tagging them in the base. The game is thought to date back to the Renaissance period, and may be inspired by the act of bride kidnapping.[29] A game of Prisoner's Base was played by members of Lewis & Clark's Corps of Discovery against a group of Nez Perce.[30][31]
What's the time, Mr. Wolf?
One player is chosen to be Mr. Wolf and stands facing away from the other players at the opposite end of the playing field. All players except Mr. Wolf chant in unison "What's the time, Mr. Wolf?", and Mr. Wolf will answer in one of two ways: Mr. Wolf may call a time - usually an hour ending in "o'clock". The other players take that many steps towards Mr. Wolf. They then ask the question again. Alternatively Mr. Wolf may call "Dinner time!", and turn and chase the other players back to their starting point. If Mr. Wolf tags a player, that player becomes Mr. Wolf for the next round.
Ringolevio
In Ringolevio, there are two teams. In one version, one team goes off and hides. The other team counts to a number such as 30 and then goes looking for them. In another version, each team has its own "jail", a park bench or other defendable area. The game goes on until all of one team is in jail. In many ways, Ringolevio is similar to Prisoner's Base.
Variants requiring equipment
Some variants of tag use equipment such as balls, paintball guns, or even flashlights to replace tagging by hand.
Blind man's buff
Blind man's buff, also known as blind man's bluff and Mr. Blind Man, is a version of tag in which one player, designated as "it", is blindfolded and attempts to tag the other players, while the other players try to avoid them.
Computer tag
Research students developed a version of tag played using handheld WiFi-enabled computers with GPS.[32][33]
Flashlight tag
Flashlight tag, also called "Army tag", "Spotlight", and "German Spotlight",[34] is played at night. Rather than physically tagging, the "it" player tags by shining a flashlight beam on other players.
In some versions, whoever is "it" is required to correctly call out the name of the person being tagged while the light shines on them. In others, "it" must remain motionless while other players roam the field of play. Some versions are played tag style, where a caught player becomes the new "it", while others are played cops and robbers style, where a caught player is sent to jail and must be rescued to return to the field of play.
Fox and geese
A traditional type of line tag, sometimes played in snow, is Fox and geese. The fox starts at the centre of a spoked wheel, and the geese flee from the fox along the spokes and around the wheel. Geese that are tagged become foxes. The intersections of the spokes with the wheel are safe zones.[35]
Kick the can
One person is "it" and a can is placed in an open space. The other players run off and hide, then it tries to find and tag each of them. Tagged players are sent to jail. Any player who has not been caught can kick the can, setting the other players free from jail.[36]
Laser tag
Laser tag is similar to flashlight tag, but using special equipment to avoid the inevitable arguments that arise about whether one was actually tagged. Players carry guns that emit beams of light and wear electronic equipment that can detect the beams and register being hit. The equipment often has built-in scoring systems and various penalties for taking hits. Pay-per-game laser tag facilities are common in North America.
Muckle
Muckle (sometimes called "muckle the man with the ball", "kill-the-guy-with-the-ball",[37] "kill the carrier", or "smear the queer", among other names) is the reverse of regular tag; all of the other players chase "it". This player is denoted by carrying a ball (usually a football). When they are caught, they are tackled, or "muckled". Whoever retrieves the ball first or whoever attacks the one who is it then becomes it. Sometimes the last player arriving to tackle the former ball carrier is the next person to be it; in other variations the player with the ball throws the ball up in the air, where it is caught by another player who becomes it.
Paintball
Paintball is a sport in which players use compressed air guns (called paintball markers) to tag other players with paint-filled pellets. Games are usually played on commercial fields with a strict set of safety and gameplay rules.
Sock tag
A tube sock is filled with a small amount of flour in the toe of the sock; the sock is then gripped by the leg hole and wielded as a flail. Striking a player with any part of the sock counts as a tag.[38][39]
Spud
Spud is a tag variant that is best played in large, open areas. Players begin each round in a central location. "it" then throws a ball high into the air. The other players run but must stop as soon as "it" catches the ball and shouts "Spud!" It may then take three large steps toward the player of his choosing before throwing the ball at that player. If the ball hits the target, that player becomes it, and the game starts over.
Team tag sports
In South Asia, two sports are variants of tag, played at the team level, sometimes internationally. In Kabaddi, raiders cross a dividing line to try to tag defenders, while continuously chanting "kabbadi" on one breath while over the line.[29] It is included in the Asian Games and even has a world championship, being played throughout India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Iran, as well as in Indian communities in Canada, Great Britain, the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, and the Netherlands. It was also demonstrated in 1936 Berlin Olympics. The other tag sport is called Kho Kho.
Tag or flag rugby is a non-contact variation in which each player wears a belt that has two velcro tags attached to it, or shorts with velcro patches. The mode of play is also similar to rugby league with attacking players attempting to dodge, evade and pass a rugby ball while defenders attempt to prevent them scoring by tagging - pulling a velcro attached tag from the ball carrier. However, the "tag" in "tag rugby" is derived from the "tags" that the players wear and the children's game of tag more closely resembles touch rugby whereby a touch replaces a tackle.
See also
- Assassin (game)
- Capture the Flag
- Flag football
- Humans vs. Zombies
- Marco Polo
- Pie (game)
- Sharks and Minnows
- Touch rugby
References
- ↑ "Traditional playground games". Nottingham Evening Post. 14 February 2009. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ "We asked 986 British people what they called the playground chasing-game: tig, tag or it". usvsth3m. 20 August 2003. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
- ↑ Steve Roud, The Lore of the Playground: One Hundred Years of Children's Games, Rhymes and Traditions, Publisher: Random House, 2010, ISBN 1-905211-51-1, ISBN 978-1-905211-51-7, 560 pages (page 30)
- 1 2 "The games children play". BBC News. 21 May 1999. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ Wise, Debra; Sandra Forest illustrator) (2003). Great big book of children's games: over 450 indoor and outdoor games for kids. McGraw-Hill Professional. p. 320. ISBN 0-07-142246-3. Cite uses deprecated parameter
|coauthors=
(help) - 1 2 Beard, Daniel Carter (1900). "Games of tag". The Outdoor Handy Book: For Playground Field and Forest. The Minerva Group, Inc. ISBN 978-0-89875-135-2.
- ↑ Sanborn, Frank B. (1904). "History and poetry from the life of F. B. Sanborn of Concord, Massachusetts". The Granite monthly: a magazine of literature, history and state progress (J.N. McClintock). 36-37.
- ↑ Cassidy, Frederic Gomes; Joan Houston Hall (1985). Dictionary of American regional English, Volume 4. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-00884-7.
- ↑ Cassidy, Frederic G. (1991). Dictionary of American Regional English: D - H, Volume 2. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-20511-1.
- ↑ "gool". The Mavens' Word of the Day. Random House, Inc. 1999.
- ↑ "Mass. grade school bans tag, other chase games". Associated Press. 19 October 2006. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ "Elementary school bans tag on its playground". Associated Press. 31 August 2007. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ "Children banned from playing tag in school playground". Daily Mail. 9 February 2007. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ Schoetz, David (16 April 2008). "Nanny State of Play? Another Tag Ban". ABC News. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ "Dinner lady's compensation claim against pupil who ran into her 'could end in chasing games being banned from schools'". Daily Mail. 19 March 2009. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ "Dinner lady bid to sue boy fails". BBC News. 3 April 2009. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ Sealey, Geraldine (24 June 2002). "Is Tag Too Tough for Kids?". ABC News. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- 1 2 Bafile, Cara (8 October 2007). "Is This "It" for Tag?". Education World. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ Anderson, Jennifer (10 September 2009). "Schools try to reduce playground conflicts". Portland Tribune. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ Ballinger, Lucy (1 September 2008). "Forget elf 'n' safety, school games like British Bulldog banned by 'cotton wool society' are back". Daily Mail. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- ↑ McFarlane, Andy (2 September 2008). "The return of British Bulldog". BBC News. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
- 1 2 3 Harding, Charlotte. "How to play tag and other chase games". Femail. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ Lileks, James (19 February 1999). "'Duck, duck' apparently has no shades of gray; 'Research' shows that Minnesota is only state that flat-out refuses to say 'goose'". StarTribune. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
- ↑ McQueen, Craig (22 October 2008). "New book celebrates games which were playground favourites of yesteryear". Daily Record. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- 1 2 Miller, Claude H. (1911). Outdoor sports and games. The Library of Work and Play. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, Page & Company.
- ↑ FamilyFun: Octopus Tag Game (Indoor Games for Kids) - and More Family Fun
- ↑ The Oxford Book of English Ghost Stories, OUP 1986.
- ↑ http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wTuZMWvmUisC&pg=PA160&lpg=PA160&dq=%22cops+and+robbers%22+childrens+game&source=web&ots=w_kxD5FGvk&sig=CxWAXEqizRySVTFQ5S-Z7CSzR3o&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result/ Great Big Book of Children's Games, by Debra Wise and Sandra Forrest. ISBN 0-07-142246-3, ISBN 978-0-07-142246-8
- 1 2 Leibs, Andrew (2004). Sports and games of the Renaissance. Sports and games through history. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 199. ISBN 0-313-32772-6.
- ↑ June 1806&_xslsrc=LCstyles.xsl#n35060803 "The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition" Check
value (help). Retrieved 7 March 2014.|url=
- ↑ "The Forgotten Games of the Corps of Discovery". 16 February 2012.
- ↑ Reichardt, Patricia (3 August 2004). "PCs bring a game of tag to the urban playground". The Independent (London). Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ "CitiTag". Centre for New Media. Open University. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ "Flashlight Tag". Lori Donnahue. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
- ↑ Grover, Kathryn (1992). Hard at play: leisure in America, 1840-1940. Univ of Massachusetts Press. p. 262. ISBN 0-87023-792-6.
- ↑ Newcombe, Jack (6 March 1970). "The Games Children Play". LIFE. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ↑ Doll, Beth; Katherine Brehm (2009). Resilient Playgrounds. School-based Practice in Action. CRC Press. p. 256. ISBN 0-415-96088-6.
- ↑ The Gigantic Book of Games for Youth Ministry
- ↑ Flour Sock Tag - The Ultimate Camp Resource
|
|