If you are someone who has not watched this show I highly recommend it and that you do not just watch the first episode and judge it maybe watch the second or third one and then make your decision about how you feel about it. What I also think is interesting about this show is that they don't have it where you are just chasing the contestant they are sometimes in a dome without a harness and I think that makes it really cool also revenge tag where the person who is being tagged can tag the tagger I also think that is interesting to add so it is not just jumping over obstacles while trying to take a tag off of the persons vest. What I love about this show is how you can have your favorite taggers. I love this show I'm glad that it is not like American Ninja Warrior because I do not want to watch another show that is just like that show if I did then I would turn on American Ninja Warrior. Don't waste your time watching this show, you could be watching better ones. The action seems fake, and it's a disservice to these talented athletes because it's more of a performance than an actual sport or competition. The whole tagging mechanic is also pointless, because it isn't doesn't result in a game over. Also matches are pretty unfair when matching regular contestants with professional athletes so there isn't much tension or competition to make a match interesting. Arenas are too linear, and repetitive and are built (like the dodge tag course) unsafe. There's not much focus on techniques and skills, or tactics for chasing or evading in Ultimate Tag. It seems like it's more of a performance to entertain children more than function as an actual sport.īut both these shows aren't just for kids, they both have a lot of really talented adult parkour athletes competing, with their own followers, sport enthusiasts or students that they coach in gyms, all probably watching them. The gross and overly dramatic costumes are too much and I hate the theatrics. Also it's a terrible rip off, I can't take Ultimate Tag seriously. I do like that they brought in some of America's best free-runners like Jesse LaFlaire, but I hate that many of these parkour athletes signed exclusivity rights to the show, so we might not see some of these talented athletes compete on world chase tag because of this. World chase Tag has been airing since 2016 in Europe, (and has been aired in the United States on NBC) but Fox claimed they were the "first" to make a tag sport. But what I have a problem with is that Fox Sports stole and ripped off a trademarked format from World Chase Tag and their catch phrase "Don't get caught". While I watch World ChaseTag, I think it's biased to say that this game is not interesting or original. I'm involved with and train in the Parkour community, and keep up with parkour competitions like Red Bull's Art of Motion, NAPC, and world chase tag. And the rest is coming to a theater near you this weekend.It's super cringey, in-genuine and unoriginal. Eventually, this game became the subject of a Wall Street Journal story, which then inspired fellow Gonzaga Prep alum Todd Steilen to kick off the script that would eventually become Tag. Everything from dressing up as an old lady to tag a friend in the park, to hiding in someone's trunk just to tag them out, has been used to further this exercise in brotherly bonding. With those rules in play, there have been a lot of crafty tags, with just as creative traps as show up in the movie set in real life to lure players into their temporary dooms. In addition, you have to answer truthfully, without hesitation, about your tagged status. A new variant with legally binding rules built in: all of February is fair game, you can't tag back the person who just tagged you. At least, that was until the group reunited almost a decade later, to kick off the almost 30-year game that they still have going right now. Playing up until their last day of high school in 1982, the stakes would keep raising in this game, until participant Tombari was left to carry the game's greatest burden: being "It" for life. Tag's infamous game began at Gonzaga Preparatory School in Spokane, Washington, where a group of 10 friends bonded over the childhood game in the 1980s.
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