Hey all,
I'm sure all of you have had some exposure to various card-based trading/collecting games. Yu-Gi-Oh, Magic: The Gathering, Vs. System (based on comic book characters), Pokemon, and others are a large part of many youth's lives. I myself am very involved in Magic: The Gathering. The game and parent company (Wizards of the Coast) was invented in 1993 by Richard Garfield, and has since become incorporated with Hasbro, Inc, and has become an extremely large and profitable company. I have been playing the game to one extent or another since I was in 5th grade, in 1995. It has helped me make many friends, of all ages, and has helped me with math skills, and complex thinking involved with strategy. In ten years, I have accumulated an extremely large collection with some cards being worth over $1000 each. Granted, it's nothing compared to early century baseball card values, but still, it's impressive to know that I could sell off one of my most fun hobbies and pay the down payment on a house.
In scouting, across the years, this has been looked at with a variety of opinions, most of them negative. I can remember having cards taken away from me on campouts, having them banned altogether, having them banned from schools, restaurants, and even mall food courts. In terms of scouting, the reason always includes the word "distracting". As I have grown older, I have seen many knee-jerk reactions of banning these cards. Some of these have been for good reasons, such as some scouts who brought their cards to summer camp would rather sit around and play instead of going to work on badges or activities. In those cases, it's good to limit their exposure to the game.
What I have come across recently, is the Collections Merit Badge. The trading card games that almost everyone has come into contact with fit PERFECTLY into this Merit Badge. I want to offer the Collections Merit Badge with a "focus on trading card games". I want to offer this at the summer camp that i work at, but I'm afraid that I will be confronted with that "knee-jerk" reaction that has happened so often before. Most troops don't allow boys to bring cards with them, with the understanding that it would take away from the Scouting experience. I think that if a Merit Badge was offered at a summer camp that highlighted their collections and experience, it would be a unique and great program. One way I could go about this was to make it clear that at the camp these cards were only acceptable during the merit badge classes.
I'm looking for suggestions on how i might run a program like this. Even if you have never had any experience with these games, please offer your opinion on the subject. Any and all comments or suggestions would be appreciated.
