Ilja
What does 'tat out' mean?
Example sentence in a USA today article: "Addison Corcoran, who lives near Ballard High School, tats out the game Kick Bot at a meeting of the Louisville Makes Games! community." So what does that mean?
15 aug. 2019 07:51
Opmerkingen · 5
2
I am American, and I sometimes play computer games, but I've never seen/heard the word "tat" used in this way until now.

I looked up the original article in USA Today. Here it is:

The example sentence with "tats" is in a photo caption. The photo shows a young woman playing a video game. So I think Serg's answer is probably correct.

I've heard the word "tats" used frequently to refer to tattoos, never as a verb ("tats"). But in the photo caption, "tats" is definitely about playing video games, not tattoos.

I looked at the writer's bio, too, so I can see the writer is still a university student. So "tats out" is the gamer slang of a younger generation. (Younger than me, at least!) I tend to dislike slang used in the news but maybe the USA Today tech editor is from a younger generation too.
15 augustus 2019
1
This is a term from the video gamer's vocabulary. It means approximately: "masterly pass a complex video game"
15 augustus 2019
Google searches threw up two possibilities the footballers craze of tattooing themselves and the video gamers that Serg mentions, so I would go with that.
15 augustus 2019
I have no clue what that means. I dont even know what american sport that pertains to
15 augustus 2019
This is a guess because I'm not American <em>I do not know a lot about American sports</em> but I think it means to display "tattoos" on the players bodies, it seems to be popular amongst football players world wide today and is a craze in other countries and other sports. But please wait for the American answers.
15 augustus 2019