I visit many odd discussion sites. One is an atheist forum ( I am an atheist). But because almost all of us there are atheists, a lot of the discussion is not about atheism. One of the threads was about games.
I am a game-player. And I don't mean the latest online game; old across-the-table board games. This one guy and I started talking about old games. We knew and had played the same ones. So I mentioned a few odd ones. One was a game were you searched for subs in 3D under a cover. He said OMG, I loved that game but couldn't remember the name and he had been searching for it. It was Sonar Sub Hunt.
The green halves lift up and you snapped in plastic rectangles for subs and round ones for mines. The grey things in the corners were working periscopes so you could watch your opponent move his destroyer around (just under the green covers). If he brushed a mine, a buzzer sounded and he lost a destroyer (I think you got 3). If he pressed a button it pushed a spring down and if it hit one of your subs, a light came on above (so no cheating allowed).
It was really quite a complex mechanical game for the 60s. Sort of a version of 'You Sunk My Battleship'. It was quite a popular draw for my neighborhood friends, and my Dad and I played it often too.
Being basically a random-luck game, it was pretty fair for everyone, but it sure was interesting.
My forum friend was thrilled to have the name so he could search for it on Ebay. I checked, it is available there, for $100.
So I threw in another odd game I had played and said NO ONE had ever heard of it. It was called "Feudal". HE had and loved it, and described some of the strategies he used. They were my strategies too.
And since MY strategies were not the ones my only opponent (a roommate) used, it was interesting that we thought alike about that..
So we compared more complex games from Avalon Hill. That company specialized in replicating historical battles in great detail. Like, in Gettysburg, all the units entered the board at the correct times and by the correct roads, the terrain mattered in attacks and defenses, etc. He played that for years too as did I.
We also compared playing other games. We both played the same games and hated the same ones. We are even almost the same age. We have both tried to find local game clubs that play such games, without success. We even like one computer game; Civilization 2 (that is a game where you start as a primitive society and slowly build or fight your way to either world domination of launching a spaceship to Alpha Centauri to establish a new colony. You can also play the Civ games online against single or multiple players and against bots.
But it turns out that we are on opposite sides of the country and both hate traveling. We will never meet.
But it is nice to know there is someone out there like me... There aren't many.