I need to break my STALKER habit so I think I'll play this game again.
Duuuude you are taking me back to "Digital Design" class in high school. We had a PC-illiterate woman trying to teach us HTML, while we were much more interested the total lack of any security on the network for the machines in that room. She was SO confident there could be no fooling around because there was an internet filter. Thought she new EVERYTHING about PCs. She taught bad, outdated HTML form, which she could not be questioned on. I think I gave up on her right there, when she gave me an 'F' for using CSS correctly. She was confused - didn't know anything about CSS. Oh dear lord, the potential javascript pranking running through my mind in those moments was astronomical. I could've given her a heart attack with the script kiddie madness I would unleash lol
I mean... the site I built was legitimately better put-together than what most businesses in the area were rocking, fully modern standards. Other kids were impressed at least "It looks like a real website!" while she just frowns. I could probably sell it to one of those businesses and get myself a car, I thought to myself. I was building PCs and beginning to solder my first PCB projects, and this lady wants to tell me about this HTML stuff she's just started reading about. I couldn't take that class even a little seriously. I took it personally. I went out of my way to get as many kids excited about Halo, because if enough of us play, it's harder to punish us when we get caught... and they probably won't close our opening, so we can just come back when things cool off.
It was all Halo from that point on. We c/p'd our assignments from tutorials and worked on our real skills the rest of the time. Way more valuable than anything else happening in that class. I got pretty good at no-scoping in there. We got caught pretty much every time, but the whole class was such a throwaway, the school itself didn't care to do much about it. But then, they never identified the mastermind.
Looking back, I think maybe she couldn't face her superiors as the 'computer' person who's class is always playing Halo over a LAN that they SERIOUSLY should not have any access to, which she is coincidentally utilizing for distributing class materials like it's a college network. I don't think anyone there understood anything to do with PCs back then.
I think everyone else just saw it as a cop-out elective, while I was actively pissed that the elective was a total joke. Meanwhile kids next door were developing their own photos in a real darkroom. The least they could do was let US play Halo, being stuck with the angry computer lady who gives terrible web design advice and doesn't know what "RAM" means. I just felt like it was only fair, since we didn't get to have fun and learn in the only elective left for us to 'choose.' Halo kicks the crap out of learning to make awful restaurant menus in Powerpoint like that's ever going to be a significant skill in any of our lives. I can't think of a more useless task. Halo does more for brain development, probably, and if you're good maybe you can compete in e-sports.