1 hour ago, drjkel said:I'm glad I started X-wing with my oldest son (he tagged along as a spectator for a few months before playing in his first event). I always had "what is he getting from this?" in mind, both from the game itself and the community. Which means that, although we met a bevy of awesome people, he was also exposed to some shady players/actions, or players even he thought were immature and whiny. I got a bit sick of explaining that some people derive self worth only from winning, whatever it takes, and that I agree that it's not the ideal way to be.
It makes the break with the community from not going to events anymore slightly easier to think he won't be exposed to the bad sides anymore. I wish I could cherry pick who goes to events locally, I may still drag him and the middle son (who now plays occasionally!) to events once in a while to be exposed to a variety of decent grown ups having fun playing a game, no matter how the actual game is going.
I always attend the store tourneys in our area with my 9yr old. We're possibly lucky with our community, 99.9% of people have been 100% fantastic. But we've had a couple small doses of salt from a (losing) opponent. This is fine by me, the contrast with the many, many great losers/winners we've been up against makes it a really good education in how not to be. The boy understands full well what it's like to be a bad loser, since he's a terrible one at home, so it's a good mirror for him and requires very little explanation. Mostly it's making him aware that he has plenty of time to stop acting like a spoiled child before he grows up
That said, if bad attitudes were in the majority, I'd consider it very much the wrong kind of education. But then I wouldn't be interested in attending these things myself.
