Date: Fri 07-Jul-1995
Date: Fri 07-Jul-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: AMYD
Quick Words:
A7-Pogs-game-toy-fad
Full Text:
THE POGS ARE COMING, with cut (A7)
B Y A MY D'O RIO
Children today just turn on a television button and become a fighter jet pilot
flying after an evil army of robots.
Or, they flip on the computer and try and solve the mystery of Where In The
World is Carmen Sandiego?
Their games are high-tech, inst-o-matic, inter-active fantasies in full color
with sound effects. To play them, all they have to do is flip a switch.
It is therefore hard to believe that with the latest toy craze, there is no ON
button.
POG, a game reminiscent of the Our Gang era, has caught on with the electronic
highway generation. It started in Hawaii, spread to California about two years
ago, and hit here during the late winter, early spring.
Toy stores, convenience markets, ice-cream shops, even coin dealers are
selling them.
Toy Works in Newtown sells out of its stock of POGS not long after it gets
them on the shelves.
Kids buy collectible milk caps that have cool designs on one side, and are
blank on the other. The game involves stacking milk caps and slamming larger
discs at them in an attempt to flip the milk caps on their blank sides.
If you flip it, you get to keep it, unless a mother or school principal says
you can't.
Outside of the gambling element, parents seem to like POG. It is a social game
and is not violent.
Flipping milk caps, the cardboard disk on the inside of the cap, is not new,
of course. It has been played for years, but the revival started in Hawaii
when a teacher there introduced the game to her students. She used the milk
caps of POG, a Hawaiian fruit drink mix.
The game spread, and the POG manufacturer let a company use its POG name to
market the game. Hence, the start up of World POG Federation, which makes game
gear.
However, the game itself can not be copyrighted or patented, so many other
companies manufacture game gear, including TROV USA, which credits itself with
bringing the game to California from Hawaii.
TROV USA President Bill Hodson said the game got so hot in that state, police
used to have to do milk cap sweeps because too many kids would be blocking
sidewalks and roadways playing the game.
He said toy stores were selling $1,000 to $3,000 worth of milk cap gear a day.
Considering children can buy a few milkcaps for around $1, that is a lot of
volume, he said.
Newtown parents, however, doubt POG will reach such a level of popularity with
their children.
Janice Fields said her children will play with them for a while, but by are
not crazed over it.
Mr Hodson agrees that POG has not hit as heavily in the East; however, his
company has plans to change that. He said they are coming to the New York area
in July to promote the game for at least a month. Plus, he said it plans to
focus most of its energies here in the future, possibly starting competitive
tournaments.
Newtown Middle Schooler Christina Herron would be the first to sign up. She is
thrilled with the game and is getting good at it too. Her tip for POG
beginners is to slam the edge of the stack, not the middle.
½If you hit the middle, it is not going to do much,¾ she said.
