Thread:Mott2020/@comment-29739768-20200122141920/@comment-29739768-20200126155352

They don't repeat events, you have to open them and then play them like the pics that are locked when you started the game. Many of the locked rooms were at one time events and whne the event is over if you didn't open the room it remains locked until you are at a level you can unlock it.

Mott if you click on a chest it usually opens and you can see wht is in it. Most of them aren't worth buying. Energy is what most of us need all the time and if you TT you can rebuild your energy. Many things you need can be added to your WL and friends send them.

Lea, Many times I am asked where my name came from or the origin of it. It's a story of my childhood. I grew up in a rural area at a time when folks didn't travel very far. No major highways like we have today so to get from one community to another we traveled through country roads. If any of you had children before the electronic age a frequent question a child asked was: 'Are we there yet?'. I'm sure that question dates back ages and my generation was no different. My father taught us a game that keep us busy and amused. Where he learned it, I have no idea. Country roads had many farms, most farms had many animals including cows, donkeys, horses, etc. we would look for the horses which we called 'shlopsky'. The person who called 'shlopsky' first counted the horse as a point. If you called another animal a 'shlopsky' you lost all your points and had to start over again. If there were several the 'shlopskys' we were awared points by the number called and who called them first. When we passed a graveyard whoever saw it first called' bury all your shlopskys' and everyone in the car lost all their points except the person who called 'bury all your shlopskys'. They would start all over again and the game continued until we reached our destination. The person who had the most 'shlopskys' when we reached our destination won the game and a reward from my father, usually a coin of some amount. It keep us busy and entertained because everyone including my parents played the game. I taught the game to my children and granchildren who also played it when we traveled with them. Thus the story of my name 'Shlopsky'.