Mercury Games and More Forgotten Things Redditors Did for Fun!

28 May 2025

Many things that sound strange to modern people were just a normal day for us. Playing with toxic stuff? Yes! Going alone to a friend’s house in another neighborhood? Of course! Doing tricks that could’ve knocked all your teeth out? Definitely! Our youth didn’t have gadgets or high-tech inventions — but it felt so alive! And sometimes you just want to go back there for one more day...

When Sunday Was a Full-On Adventure

Today, Sunday means some people are watching Netflix, others are trying to nap off their brunch, and someone is watching cat videos for the eighth time. But back in the day, Sundays were different: it was when dad would say, “Get in the car!” and drive… wherever the road took us. 

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No one knew the route, no one asked questions. It was like a journey into the unknown, guided only by instinct and the phrase “Let’s turn right here.” Kids today, raised on GPS and Google Maps reviews, would probably panic. Drive somewhere without knowing where you're going? What if there's no Wi-Fi?

TV Shows Were Like One-Time Dates

Today you can pause a show, rewind it, rewatch it, download it, google about it, subscribe, and forget. But in the good old days, it was different. If a show aired at 8 pm, you had to be in front of the TV at 7:59, with tea, cookies, and a turned-off phone (well, phones weren’t really around yet). 

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Miss it — goodbye forever. You had to find a recap in the newspaper or forget about it. Organizing your life around a TV schedule — now that was a challenge! Modern teens just can’t understand why discipline was needed for a single episode.

The Forest Was Your Universe

Have you ever built a fort in the woods out of an old pallet, some boards, and a huge imagination? No? Well, we did. Not just built but created entire settlements with guards, “secret passages,” and passwords that were constantly forgotten. We scavenged building materials from anywhere — if there was construction nearby, consider it our IKEA. 

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The best part? No Wi-Fi, just pine trees and first love somewhere in the top of our homemade cabin. Today, parents would probably be sued for letting kids do that but back then — it was awesome!

Coin Games? Brilliant Idea!

Nowadays, kids are entertained by interactive toys, screens, and game subscriptions more expensive than rent. But we had dad with a handful of change. He’d just throw coins in the yard and say, “Go find them.” Like it was gold! 

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Someone would find fifty cents — and feel rich. Then the whole crew would go to the store to buy gum, lollipops, and maybe one big candy to share. It was a real quest and honestly, way more fun than any virtual “level-up reward.”

Prank Calls

Once, the phone was a tool for fun. Dial a random number, hold back laughter, ask “Is your mom home? Does the fridge work?” and enjoy life — that was the height of wit. But time passed, and suddenly… a call on your mobile is a panic attack. 

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The paradox of adulthood: you could be the master of prank calls but now you’re scared even to answer a delivery service call. Something definitely broke along the way!

Launched Into the Leaves at Full Speed!

If you’ve never been wrapped in a sleeping bag, spun like a centrifuge, and thrown into a pile of leaves — congrats, you had a safe childhood. Ours — not so much. It was wild, fun, and a little dangerous. 

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But nobody complained. The main thing was to land in the leaves, not a tree. And if you didn’t crash into something hard — the day was a success!

Games Without Wi-Fi and Parents

Playdates? Calendar invites? You’re joking. We just left the house, walked to a friend’s, and rang the doorbell. “Is Peter home?” — and that was it. No logistics, just life. Summer was the perfect scenario: leave in the morning, come back dirty, hungry but happy in the evening. 

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Nobody tracked you, GPS didn’t exist but there was freedom. Sure, sometimes we fell, fought, or climbed where we shouldn’t have — but we lived. Not just existed under the watchful eyes of nannies and apps.

Cards Were Everything

In the sixties and seventies, kids didn’t have iPads – we had a deck of cards, and that was enough for the whole day. With friends, we played Whist – regular, Honeymoon, Kitty (yes, that was a thing too). 

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When we got older and had jobs – it was time for poker: five-card draw, stud, seven-card stud, wild card games, anything! A deck of cards was like a best friend – it never ran out of battery and never needed an update.

Clouds of Poison – For Fun

Remember those huge machines that sprayed mosquito chemicals? We didn’t run away from them – we ran straight into the cloud! Screaming, laughing, feeling like we were in a sci-fi movie. 

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Today it would look like a “biological attack” but back then – it was just summer fun. No one knew what was inside but we were happy (and honestly, maybe a little bit glowing in the dark).

One Time At a Stoplight!

In the evening, you’d get in the car with your friends and just drive. No route, no GPS, no destination. At a stoplight, you’d chat with other kids in the next car – like a scene from American Graffiti. 

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It was a real ritual: cruising the town, talking nonsense, feeling cool. Today this would be called “wasting gas” but back then – it was just Friday.

Teen Street Mayhem of the 90s

Yes, there were times when teenagers went outside not for TikTok but for full-blown chaos. No curfews, no police who cared about a few rowdy high schoolers. We’d throw toilet paper in our friends’ trees, hurl eggs, go wild. 

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Some went further – smashing car windows, spray-painting buildings. Sounds awful? Back then – it was fun and “just like in the movies.” But honestly, better not to repeat that!

Family Picnic – Oh, the Nostalgia!

There was a time when the whole family would gather: baskets, blankets, sandwiches, lemonade, frisbee – and off to nature. It was an event! Laughter, mosquitoes, barbecue, kids chasing a ball. And now? Even if there is a picnic, everyone’s glued to their smartphone. 

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Someone’s filming a reel, someone’s arguing in the comments, someone forgot what their family looks like. The picnic has become just content background. But back then – it was real life.

The Place Where Life Happened!

Today kids “hang out” in Discord or TikTok. But back then we had a sacred place – the mall. You could spend the whole day there, wandering around the arcades, racking up tokens, trying to win a toy from a rigged claw machine (no chance, of course). 

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Then – to the food court, where, yes, you could smoke! Right next to your burger. Not the best idea (or smell) to be honest! It was all smoke, laughter, and fries. And most importantly – your crew was always there, so the day was a success.

Recording Music from the Radio

Before Shazam and Spotify, there was you, a cassette, and patience. You’d sit, listening to the radio, and as soon as your favorite song started – hit “REC”! The main thing was to avoid the moment when the host talked over the chorus or when the ad started. 

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Top 40 with Rick Dees was especially crucial – all the hits! Later, you’d rewind trying to find where someone said “ad in one minute” and ruined your masterpiece. It was a whole quest!

Bottle Caps and BBQ Sports

If you didn’t have a big jar of bottle caps – you didn’t live! We held full-on matches: it was like baseball but with a cap instead of a ball, and a broomstick instead of a bat. 

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There were “fastballs,” “floaters,” all kinds of tricky pitches. It was a sport we invented ourselves – no rules, maximum fun.

Doing Nothing – And It Was Awesome!

Today, if a teenager is “doing nothing,” people think they’re lost. But for us, “nothing” was an art form. You’d sit with your friends somewhere in the yard. Someone throws a rock, someone steps on an ant. 

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Then someone says, “let’s go to the woods?” – and the whole gang instantly turns into a team of explorers. Or suddenly, an impromptu football game starts. We weren’t “wasting time,” we were creating a world out of boredom.

Empty Bottles – A Source of Cash!

When you’re eight and you find three empty Coke bottles – you feel like a millionaire. Because you could turn them in and get two cents each! Then you and your friends would run to the store and use those six cents to buy caramels, lollipops, and, if you’re lucky, a stretchy rubber toy. 

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Sometimes it was a whole expedition around the neighborhood: searching for bottles, dragging them in bags, and then proudly standing at the counter deciding which candy mattered most. Kid business!

Barbie’s Fashion Designers

Today, Barbie has a blog, an Instagram, and a wardrobe from ten online shops. But back then – it was you, scissors, and mom’s old fabric scraps. Making clothes for Barbie wasn’t just play – it was a creative enterprise. 

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We made dresses, hats, even “purses” from buttons. A Barbie house? From a shoebox and a yogurt lid. And honestly, it was cooler than any plastic store-bought thing. Because it had everything – style, love, and imagination.

8-Bit and Eternity

You sit down to play. You insert the cassette into the computer. Press “Play.” And… you wait. Ten minutes. Sometimes fifteen. It squeaks, it beeps, the screen flashes with lines, and you just wait to start a level in some arcade miracle. 

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Half the time you didn’t play – you waited. But if the game loaded – it was victory! Now, if loading takes more than a second – it’s a tragedy. But we were patient warriors of the 8-bit era.

Magazines and Books Always With You

Today, if someone doesn’t have a smartphone, they’re horrified by the idea of “waiting.” But we always had a magazine or a book in our bag. Just in case – a line at the clinic, a bus that never comes, or just a boring class. 

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You take it out, read – and you’re good. Everyone read their own thing. But the main point – you entertained yourself. No notifications, no Wi-Fi. Just you and the printed word.

Catching Fireflies

A summer evening. The air is warm, smells like grass, and suddenly – sparkling lights. Fireflies! Barefoot in the grass, with a jar in hand, you run after them like a hunter chasing magic. You catch one – watch it glow. Let it go. And run again! 

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It was romance, science, and sport all in one. No iPhone flashlight could compare to that tiny living light you held in your hand.

Stretching the Taffy!

When you heard the word “taffy,” you knew: fun was coming. And stickiness. It wasn’t just candy, it was a whole event. Homemade taffy had to be pulled – stretched, folded, stretched again. All by hand.

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Best done as a group: kids, adults, grandma in her apron. Everyone sticky with sugar, everyone giggling, someone yelling “it’s in my hair!” – but in the end – a mountain of the most delicious taffy, made with love!

London Without a Goal and Without the Internet

In the early '90s, London felt like a scene from a movie: loud, bright, and free. Young people could just drive around the city all night — no GPS, no messages, no destination. Music played from the cassette deck, windows were down, and inside the car was a feeling of total independence. 

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The city offered freedom not through technology but by simply allowing you to live in the moment — no calls, no notifications — just you, the night, and London! And it wasn’t just London — before smartphones, people in many cities spent time with each other instead of being locked away with their gadgets.

Time That Was in No Hurry

When friends weren’t around, kids would quietly sit by their house and pop the warm tar bubbles used to seal cracks in the pavement. This could go on for hours and nobody saw it as a waste of time. 

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There was a whole day ahead, and all it took was a bit of patience until bikes finally appeared around the corner. And who could blame them — those quirky hobbies were part of the fun.

The Tire Swing

Back then, safety definitely wasn’t a top priority. There was a tire hanging from a tree, with a drop underneath and a pile of dry leaves at the bottom. A whole gang of girls would take turns launching themselves into that crackling pit without a second thought. 

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It wasn’t just a game — it was a full-blown ritual. No one knew words like "fear" or "caution". There was only laughter, squeals, and the feeling that you could leap right over the world.

The Catalogue You Wanted to Order Everything From

Before online shopping, there was a sacred book — the paper catalogue. It didn’t just show products, it invited you to dream. Pages were folded, “future purchases” marked with pen, and time flew by. 

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A child’s imagination could build entire lives — with dollhouses, game consoles, and tracksuits that would never end up in your closet. But it didn’t matter — wanting, imagining, dreaming was more than enough.

When Music Was the Entertainment

Today music plays in the background of everything — the commute, workouts, cleaning. But back then, it was the main event. You’d lie down, close your eyes, and listen to an album from start to finish — no distractions, no screens, no interruptions. 

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It was silence, filled with sound — a rare moment when a person was truly alone with themselves and their inner world.

“Hey, Let’s Get to Know Each Other!”

Before chats and likes, there was one weird way to “meet” people — through the busy phone signal. People would dial... their own number. Yes, really. They’d catch the endless tone, and somehow land on a strange "line" full of other bored callers. 

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And between beeps, someone would whisper “Hi,” someone else would share a number, another would plan a meetup. It was like a group chat — just with static.

The Milk Challenger

You’d think drinking a liter of milk was easy — but not when each participant dyed theirs a different color with food coloring. It turned into a chaotic arena. 

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The winner wasn’t just the fastest drinker but the one who kept it all down. It’s no wonder the champions of this game were immune to whatever horrors were served in school cafeterias.

Stealing for Candy and Comics

Today, a stunt like that would trigger half the internet. But back then, kids were just... living. 

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Climbing neighbor’s trees for apples, stealing empty milk bottles off porches (thanks, milkman!), turning them in for spare change and setting up their “office” in someone’s attic — full of comics, sweets, and grown-up magazines found who-knows-where. It was a real secret base: no electricity but endless imagination.

Saturday Was for Bowling and Skating

If it was a Saturday — you knew the plan: bowling in the morning, roller skating at night. No questions asked. By day, it was all about trying to land that strike and impress whoever was on the next lane. 

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By evening, you slipped on your glittery skates and glided in circles to the beat. The lights dimmed, neon glowed, slow songs played — and for a few hours, everyone was equal, whether you just learned to skate or could already dance on wheels.

The Pager Game

As soon as teens got their hands on pagers, they turned them into pure entertainment. A few cars, a few teams, and one mission — to chase the one who was “it”. That person would send a code, just numbers, hinting at their location. 

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The rest would race to find them. Whoever got there first became the next “chaser”. It was a wild mix of logic, speed, and frantic driving from payphone to payphone. No maps, no GPS — just instinct and a couple coins to make the call.

Flirting on Woodward Avenue

In the '60s and '70s, street flirting wasn’t just a thing — it was the main event. On Detroit’s Woodward Avenue, evenings turned into rolling meetups. Teens cruised back and forth in their cars, laughing, waving, teasing, chatting through open windows. 

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No DMs, no left swipes. It all happened in real time — through a smile, a look, or a quick joke. Some of those casual drive-bys turned into friendships, stories, even marriages that lasted for decades.

Airports Were the New Amusement Parks

Back then, an airport wasn’t just for travelers. Families would come just to hang out, even without tickets or bags. There were open observation decks where you could watch planes take off and land for hours. 

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Some came with snacks, others just to admire the sky. It was like meditation — the roar of engines, the streaks in the sky, and the calm of doing absolutely nothing. Try that today and you’ll get asked for your passport within minutes.

Finding Jobs in the Newspaper

Before LinkedIn and job sites, there was the classifieds section. You’d sit down with a pen and your coffee, circling any job that looked promising. 

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Some people, just for fun, would flip to the “Personals” and giggle at lines like “Libra male seeks Aries female for dancing and adventure.” The paper was both your recruiter and your dating app — one folded page at a time.

Let’s Meet Before the Movie Starts

Going to the drive-in meant showing up early — not just for a parking spot but for the vibe. Someone would set up a folding chair, others leaned on their car, chatting about the weather, the band on the radio, or who broke up with who. 

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When the movie started, couples would disappear into the seats — some watching the film, others more focused on the “romantic plot” playing out in the backseat.

Watering the Lawn  Pure Joy!

When the heat hit and someone turned on the hose, a regular lawn watering instantly turned into a summer party. Kids from all over the block came running for a water dash: who could leap over the spray, who would stand right in it squealing. 

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No one cared about wet clothes, bare feet, or muddy puddles. It was simple, spontaneous fun — no entertainers, no apps, just summer, water, and laughter.

The Music That Came From the Garage

Once upon a time, concerts weren’t organized by producers — they were created by regular teenagers. It wasn’t about hype, it was a way to say, “Hey, we exist!” Every week brought new lineups, someone’s backyard, a rented hall, and a feeling of complete unity. 

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People didn’t just listen to the music — they were part of it. After the shows, everyone went to 24-hour diners, sitting for hours, discussing who played how. It wasn’t a hobby — it was a lifestyle, where a five-dollar ticket could bring pure happiness.

Springs, Keys, and a Little Bit of Magic

Back then, kids didn’t need apps to have fun. They simply screwed roller skates onto regular shoes — yes, screwed on — and the key for tightening the skates was worn on a string around the neck like a treasure. 

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There were also springy metal overshoes and endless experiments with tricks. It was like a living joy lab, where falling down was part of the fun, not a reason to give up.

The Higher You Jump, the Braver You Are

Jumping off a garage roof? With no safety gear? Why not! No one waited for a special setup to feel a rush of adrenaline. Just a roof, some courage — and suddenly there’s a line of kids wanting to “face their fear.” 

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It sounds wild now but those were the moments where confidence was born. Though we don’t recommend trying it — maybe it was fun for some but it was definitely dangerous.

Letters with the Scent of Summer

Before messengers and instant replies, long-distance friendship lived on paper. You’d find addresses in newspapers, write letters by hand, decorate them with stickers, and add photos. 

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It was more than communication — it was a ritual. Replies took weeks but that only made them more precious. Especially if a letter reached you on vacation and you’d call home from a pay phone once a week to share how amazing everything was.

Nostalgia for the Library

Going to the library used to be a real event. Adults read stories aloud, kids listened in awe, and then wandered between shelves for hours looking for that one perfect book. 

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What brought special joy were the checkout cards — finding a familiar name made you feel instantly connected. It was a world where books weren’t just read — they were truly lived.

Wow, So Happy to See You!

There was a time when no one scheduled visits — and it wasn’t just about kids. Friends and relatives would just stop by “for coffee,” no texts, no warnings, no cleaning the house for hours. 

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It was totally normal: people were available not by appointment but simply because they cared. Today, that would feel almost bold — but back then, it was a simple way of showing love, in a real-life chat and a cup of coffee without phones on the table.

Mercury, Asbestos, and a Fun Childhood

Today’s parents examine toothpaste ingredients under a microscope. But back then? Playing with mercury was cool! Asbestos was normal! Chemistry was part of the game: “Look how it shines!” “This white cloud is fun, touch it!” And somehow, we survived! 

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Not everyone dared to play with that stuff, of course... Now even hearing “mercury” or “asbestos” makes adults shiver but back then those games seemed so interesting. Maybe our immune systems just leveled up, or maybe we just got lucky!

One-on-One Dancing, Not for the Feed

Dancing used to mean something more than just moving to a beat. It was a mini love story, even if just for one song. You picked a partner, caught the rhythm, and it was like disappearing from the crowd for a few minutes. 

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No group dances for “stories,” no phones in the air. Dancing was about emotion, not content. And if you danced together for a few songs — well, something was definitely going on between you two.

Races Outside the Bar

Grown-ups, a bar, a few drinks — and then suddenly someone would shout, “Race you to the corner!” And off they went. It was childhood spontaneity living on in adulthood. 

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Winning wasn’t the point — the point was that life didn’t end at the table with cocktails, it began at the corner!

The Corner Where Everyone Belonged

Evenings weren’t spent indoors. Teens were drawn to street corners like magnets. Dozens of kids would gather — it was more than a hangout. 

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It was a space for friendship, flirting, rumors, and inside jokes. Today those corners are empty. But those who were there still remember what it felt like to be part of something bigger.

Bread at 3 AM? Why Not!

Following the bread truck in the middle of the night just to grab a fresh loaf right off the delivery? That was almost a ritual. Especially after a party. 

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Hot bread, cool night, a little tipsy — and suddenly the world felt kinder. It was like a reward for staying up late. Today bread comes by subscription or strict schedule. Back then — it came by soul and stomach!

A Song on the Radio as a Love Letter

Radio used to be a real bridge between hearts. Sending a message to your crush meant waiting in line, hoping the DJ would read it, and listening in silence, holding your breath. 

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And when your song came on — it felt like a hug through the speakers. Music used to connect people — not just play as background noise in earbuds.

Hide-and-Seek Game

When hide-and-seek spread across the whole block, it turned into an epic quest. Climbing roofs, hiding in bushes, jumping fences — it wasn’t just a game, it was the stuff of lifelong memories. 

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Winning meant more than just staying hidden — it meant becoming part of a legend. You always planned to use that hiding spot again... but somehow, there was never a next time.

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