Kids will never experience being stared at by people sitting on their porches while slow-driving through a seedy neighborhood because you read the map upside down.
I enjoyed looking at the big map of my state and calculating the approximate time we would either pass a city, or arrive at our destination. It was fun. I was pretty close too!
Japan doesn't have street names except for a very very few, so in the past when someone would give you directions, they would make you a map and add details for where to turn (e.g. house with blue roof and a dog).
Houses do have numbers though and there's a code used by mailmen, so that also helps.
Mate we used to navigate from large physical atlases. I remember having to pull out the state atlas and find page for the county we were in and then route a path and navigate my mom to our destination when I when I was like 12.
We drive across the country every summer to visit family. Growing up, my parents used to talk about different routes and which one felt faster. Like "you can get off the interstate and take this county road and shave some time off." But then they'd argue about if it was worth taking a road with a lower speed limit even if it was less distance.
Eventually they tried to impart that wisdom to me and would ask "so which route are you taking?" It took years for them to finally grasp that I just go whatever the way the GPS tells me is faster.
I drove 1500 miles with directions to the town center, and a phone number written on a paper plate. I then used a pay phone to call her and tell her "Surprise, I drove to your town, wheres your apartment?"
She bet me I wouldn't.
I won that bet. Victory party lasted the entire weekend, then I drove home. 😂
Uhhh.... custom turn-by-turn from mapquest is a pretty recent thing. I used to use an atlas supplemented by more foldy-uppy paper maps and even occasionally stopping to ask for directions.
I have a thing called left-right confusion and before mapquest I was hurtin'! I would go in a gas station and get directions but never had a pen to write them down and then the odds of me mentally flipping a turn at some point were like 200%
mapquest was a boon but I truly love just letting siri tell me which way to go. This rarely backfires.
My buddy installed alarm systems. He had the Thomas Guide, or whatever the book of maps was, and learned to navigate like a badass. I've always got lost and smartphones changed my world.