As far as Maddie was concerned, the reason behind her frequent hair color changes should've been obvious. “It gets people's attention,” she answered simply. “When someone walks into a room, the first person they tend to notice is the one with the awesome hair.” Most of the time, anyway. Sometimes the first person to get noticed was someone wearing a wacky shirt or pants.
“If it's really important, they'd probably announce it over the intercoms or something.” That was her argument and she was sticking to it. Not that this was a serious discussion or anything, but her point still stood.
Maddie couldn't help but laugh at that. “Exactly. It's kind of like a more awesome version of pin the tail on the donkey.” A distant cousin of that game, at least. Maddie was glad April didn't voice her thoughts on her intelligence. She probably wouldn't have reacted very well, given that most people who said she was smart were generally saying it to make fun of her.
“Black and white spaces are worth ten points, and the little red and green spaces are worth fifty? Bull's eye is worth a hundred, and we play to one thousand points?” Maddie suggested. Not that she expected either of them to keep accurate score, but it was better than the regular rules of darts.