Monopoly is a board game published by Parker Brothers, a subsidiary of Hasbro. The game is named after the economic concept of monopoly, the domination of a market by a single entity.
Monopoly is the most commercially-successful board game in United States history, with 485 million players worldwide.
According to Hasbro, since Charles Darrow patented the game in 1935, approximately 750 million people have played the game, making it "the most played (commercial) board game in the world."The 1999 Guinness Book of Records cited Hasbro's previous statistic of 500 million people having played Monopoly. Games Magazine has inducted Monopoly into its Hall of Fame.
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Cat-opoly Board Game |
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Cat-opoly is a feline frenzy of fun! Buy your favorite cats such as the Tonkinese, the Ragdoll, the Abyssinian, the Sphinx or the Maine Coon. Land on Catnip and collect everything in the center of the board... |
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Puppy-opoly Board Game for Kids 5-8 Years old |
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Puppy-opoly is a LITTLE KID VERSION of an old favorite. For kids 5-8. Players adopt puppies as they make their way around the board. Woof! Woof! Little kid game play includes barking the number of treats owed when landing on a space, high pawing other players, balancing treats on noses... |
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Pony-opoly for ages 5-8 Years OldReviewsMy 2 girls can play together on their own after instructions and a few games with us. They can understand everything. It's just a perfect fit for us. They are having such a great time playing and it is so fun since we are really into real life horses too. I highly recommend this enjoyable game for young children. Average Rating:![]() |
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Pony-opoly is a LITTLE KID VERSION of one of our favorites. For kids 5-8. Players collect ponies as they make their way around the board and TAP! TAP! with their imaginary hooves the number of treats owed when another player lands on their pony... |
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Green Bay Packers NFL Team Collector's Edition Monopoly |
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It s Crunch Time! Monopoly joins forces with the National Football League to bring you the excitement and drama played out on the Frozen Tundra of Lambeau Field. The sheer power and strength of the Green Bay Packers is now yours to own! Experience the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat as you vie for the all-time greatest Packers assets, including Packers Most Valuable Players like Paul Hornung and Bart Starr, all-time greats like Brett Favre, the legendary Vince Lombardi and Super Bowl Championships... |
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Boston Celtics Monopoly |
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Monopoly and Boston Celtics fans can take it to the hoop with this special Collector's Edition game. It's themed with the die-hard fan in mind and features six collectible pewter tokens. For two to six players. |
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Late for the Sky Coffee-opoly |
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IS THE PLANET SHAKING OR IS IT JUST YOU? 4 out of 5 Americans consume more than 400 million cups of coffee per day! Do we love the bean? Yes we do! We also love the buzz, the taste, the aroma, the ritual... |
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Play Money Tie by Fun Ties - Black Polyester |
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This unique novelty tie features colorful play money on a durable black polyester fabric. This necktie is worth a million dollars, well a million dollars in play money. |
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TS329 Twister Game Junk Food Juniors T-Shirt |
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Twister Game Junk Food Juniors T-ShirtBrand New!! Officially Licensed Junk Food ClothingColor: Green |
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Play Money Extra Long Tie by RM Style - Black Polyester |
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This unique novelty extra long tie features colorful Monopoly play money on a durable polyester fabric. This necktie is worth a million dollars, well a million dollars in play money. |
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MonopolyReviewsWe had fun as this game will never end.... Good even for 4 people..... cant be played in a larger scale though... Monopoly is somewhat educational as far as the business world goes--but ultimately it's a a piggy, greedy Republican game. Don't play it a lot. You'll raise unpleasant kids. [And no, I'm not a Democrat.] Can't American toy makers come up with something more creative than the 1000th version of Monopoly? I recently got back into Monopoly and am really loving these new sets. Very nice and a real bargain for all the hours of enjoyment you'll get from it. It's also a great educational lesson for both kids and adults, teaching about investments, passive income, saving, and more. Lots of fun, especially when you have a group of about four players. There are a lot of versions of this game and this one is the best in my opinion. So classic that it's hard to improve on. :) My nephew really enjoys this game and is learning the value of money. Its a good educational game for thr whole family This Monopoly set was cheaply produced in China, as you might guess given its price. For a family looking for a first set, it seems satisfactory. But anyone who has played Monopoly for years should be on notice that this set, redesigned in 2008, includes several minor annoyances. First, the most practical annoyance. The board folds up into quarters, which allows the manufacturer to fit the set into a smaller box, presumably to reduce production costs. But because the box is somewhat smaller (about 16 inches long), there is no room for the sort of convenient tray for Monopoly money that was once standard in the old boxes (which were about 20 inches long). This is annoying for both gameplay and storage. Second, the producers have unnecessarily and inexplicably made small changes to the rules of the game -- rules that have stood for more than half a century. Landing on the Luxury Tax space used to cost you $75; now it costs $100. The new rules also change the numbers of each kind of bill to be apportioned to players at the start of the game -- and in fact, the game comes with a smaller supply of some bills. Mention of this set's Monopoly money brings us to the third annoyance: the manufacturers made numerous gratuitous changes to the look of the game. The palette of colors used for Monopoly bills in the United States since the 1940s has been changed: The $10 bill used to be yellow; now it's blue. The $50 bill used to be blue; now it's purple. (These changes make it hard to reuse money from older Monopoly sets.) Among the other unnecessary changes to the look of the game: The formerly purple properties on the board (Mediterranean Avenue and Baltic Avenue) have been recolored brown. The Community Chest and Chance cards are now printed on white cardstock instead of the familiar orange and yellow, and the classic drawings on those cards have been replaced with computer-generated 3D cartoons. Even the "Go" space has been redesigned: now the word "Go" is written in black instead of the familiar red. (Stodgy purists might also be put off by the various alterations to font, logo, and other design elements.) To be sure, these changes do not alter the fundamentals of the game itself. But they are annoying enough that anyone with nostalgic memories of the game from childhood should consider a different set. Average Rating:![]() |
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In 1934, in the midst of the Great Depression, an unemployed heating engineer from Pennsylvania created the game of Monopoly. Realizing that his get-rich theme might appeal to other Americans, he had the game printed and distributed in a Philadelphia department store... |
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Hasbro Games Monopoly Deal Card GameReviewsI bought this game after watching the commercial and reading some reviews on Amazon when the game was still in its introductory phase. This game is hands-down one of the best inventions out there. It is a solution for those who want a hint of Monopoly without all the extra tedious hours. The rules may seem a little lengthy and confusing but the answers will unfold throughout the gameplay. I've played this game with my friends and several of them have purchased it afterward without my pushing the product! This game is excellent for quick, addicting fun! I recommend it to everyone! I had never heard of this game until I was playing it with friends a few months ago. After that, I wanted a set for myself. The game is easy to learn, relatively quick to play compared to Monopoly the board game, and the important rules come on a double-sided card of which there are enough for four players. Monopoly Deal is currently my favorite strategy card game and good for any small group of people(2-5). Purchased this game to play with family in the evenings. We ususally play a card game or something together about 5 to 6 times a week and wanted something new. When we first received the card set and read the directions...well, let's just say a look of total confusion formed on all of our faces. But right there in the directions it tells you, as though they could read our minds, just play, it will all make sense! Boy, was Mattel right! My youngest son, 22 years old, a friend of his 25 and me the oldster at 52 LOVE playing this together. My husband's not really into it as he doesn't care for Monopoly, but I keep telling him, me either!! Monopoly takes forever and after a while, who cares whose got all the hotels. This game is fast paced and we even tweaked the rules ourselves to lenghthen the playing time. But the great thing is, once you've played a game, it's still time to play another, and another, and another!! We now receive 7 cards initially, can keep up to 9 in our hands and must have 4 completed properties to win. Hey, just play, it will all make sense. Gotta run, must order another pack of cards. These have held up really well with DAILY play and even marathons between my son and his friends, but want to have a spare pack on hand. Great card game, I believe that those who like monopoly will enjoy this game. But also those who don't like monopoly should enjoy this one as well, since the games run much faster (15 min each play). Very entertaining. My title says it, "This game is for all of the Monopoly-haters out there." Many people I know have played the original Monopoly board game. When the option ever comes up to play a family game and Monopoly is mentioned, for sure someone will say something like this, "But it takes so long!" Well this incarnation of Monopoly actually solves that problem, with an average game taking 10-20 minutes, depending on skill level and distractions. But not only is this game much faster than the board game, it is very, very fun and enjoyable. As a matter of fact, I just recently played this game with my neighbors, and their barely 6-year-old son playeed right along with us, so the required skill level and the learning curve is not so high that it is difficult to get into the game. After playing this game a few times, one may even find this to be somewhat addictive. Great game. If you don't have a copy, buy one and try it out. If you do have a copy, then play a game today! Average Rating:![]() |
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Dealing and trading! A new twist on Monopoly! Be careful not to lose everything!Monopoly is now in a whole new category! Monopoly's brand iconography and heritage is featured in this dynamic game of acquisition, dealing, and trading... |
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The MONOPOLY Companion: The Players' GuideReviewsThis is a cute little book that does a great job giving you the history behind the game. I learned quite a bit about Monopoly's origins and the history it shares with Atlantic City that I never even heard about before. I also enjoyed the "Trip Around the Board" section, where "Mr. Monopoly" gives us his tips on each property color group. One of my favorite parts was reading recaps of various Monopoly championships and the tips given by some of those world champions. Very illuminating to how it works in serious game play! While I wouldn't call this a "must have" to keep with a Monopoly set, it does make you want to break out the Monopoly set and play with the nearest person. This product is excelent for those who doesn't know well how to play Monopoly. For those who has access to Parker Brother web page, this is the same information. For those who played Monopoly a lot, like me, this is only a review. I like this book so much, is better read it than a computer screen. Don't miss it if you want to teach your children how to play and how to analize. My eight years old little girl play like a pro before I read this book. I believe that if you looked at all the brand name games out there (therefore taking non-brand name games like chess, checkers and backgammon), there is no game out there more popular than Monopoly. Although it may be popular for over seventy years, there have been very few books about it. Philip Orbanes has written one of the few exceptions, The Monopoly Companion. Actually, the gimmick of the book is that it is actually Mr. Monopoly who is telling the book to Orbanes. Mr. Monopoly is the wealthy gentleman who appears in the Monopoly logo as well as several Chance and Community Chest cards; I always knew him as Rich Uncle Pennybags, but apparently Parker Brothers changed the name recently. And though the first part of the book presents a history of the game, somehow this old name is omitted completely. After the history, there is an explanation of the rules of the game. There are official rules and then there are the house rules that we all use to tweak the game, probably most commonly by placing money on the Free Parking spot. After the rules, we get to the heart of the book: a breakdown of all the properties and their relative values and some strategies. The value of a particular monopoly (a color group, the railroads or the utilities) are based on several factors including cost of acquisition, how frequently they are landed on, how expensive they are to develop and how quickly they pay back in rent the money spent on them. Another factor is what point the game is at: a monopoly may be more valuable earlier in the game than later. After these sections, the book goes into Monopoly parties and tournaments and even gives the reader a quiz. Overall, this is an interesting book but not great. For one thing, the Mr. Monopoly gimmick wears thin rather quickly. Also, playing Monopoly is more fun than reading about others playing it, so the tournament narratives are just so-so. It is the middle of the book that redeems the book, however, giving insights that may have not occurred to many players. If you're a fan of Monopoly, this book is a reasonably good and inexpensive acquisition; even with its flaws, it offers enough of value to merit a low four stars. Everyone has a Monopoly set somewhere at home. If you're like me your set of instructions disappeared long ago and was only a sheet of paper with small font at best anyway. This book explains all the rules in great detail. I never knew there was a limit on the number of houses and hotels and that when there aren't enough green houses you couldn't just fork out the monetary value for a hotel. The age old debate of does free parking collect all the taxes and whoever lands on it gets the money is answered as well. The answer is no by the way. This is a great handy guide for any arguments about the rules. Even if you already know all of the rules this is still a pretty good purchase. Inside is a heap of trivia such as the names of all the characters on the board and cards, the fact that Parker Bros prints 50 billion dollars of Monopoly money each year and the fact that on average each player makes about $175 dollars around the board. A comparison of the Monopoly properties and what those streets are actually like in the real Atlantic City both when the game was invented and today is very interesting reading along with the predecessors to Monopoly and other historical information. There are also tips on how to play from Mr Monopoly including which are the best properties to purchase. This is an excellent little book for anyone who enjoys playing the best board game ever invented. Playing Monopoly can be a long endeavor, especially if you play with people who don't know the official rules. If you have endured such hardship, you could recommend this guide to such beginning players.This book basically gives a lot of tips to the game that most novice players don't know. One of these tips is knowing which monopolies are the most powerful on the board (and it's not Park Place and Boardwalk most of the time!). It is entertaining and can be easily read in one afternoon. There is quite a bit of filler, though, if you just want to get to the nitty-gritty of how to improve your play. His "interview format" with Uncle Moneybags is humorous, but can drag on if you're just in the market for how to become a Monopoly master.In the end, it's an enjoyable book for most beginners and intermediate players, but can irritate a player who is quite familiar with the game and just looking to get to the highest levels of gameplay. Average Rating:![]() |
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After more than 50 years, Rich Uncle Pennybags has finally decided to tell the world everything he knows about the history, rules, and winning strategies of the world's most popular board game. Profusely illustrated. |
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Monopoly: The World's Most Famous Game--And How It Got That WayReviewsWhen I picked up this book, I wasn't sure if I was going to like it. I thought it was going to be a book just about the game and its glory. While I was intrigued because Monopoly is my favorite game, I figured I would give it a shot. And boy was I surprised. The book starts off with the Author in search of the history of the game. Which leads him not Monopoly, but to two key figures; Henry George and Elizabeth Magie Phillips. Henry George wrote a socialist book about the Single Tax Theory in his book Progress and Poverty in 1879. Ms. Phillips developed a game called the "Landlord's Game" in 1903 based off Mr. George's theory. This interesting beginning started a revolution that we know today. While many game manufactures like Parker Brothers would not carry the game, Lizzie would patent it and give teach friends how to play the game. Some investors decide to build on a parcel of land to test the theory out where Lizzie sent them a copy of the game. The town was Arden, DE. As she taught her friends, they taught others and it eventually made it to a class room at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania to teach students economics and the evils of Monopolies. As students were taught this game, it migrated to other colleges and university including Columbia University. It started to become popular by word of mouth. The Landlord Game went through many modifications to become Monopoly. The Atlantic City theme did not appear until1930's When Dorothy and Cyril Harvey started to put the names of the streets and avenues of the town. They played this game with Charles and Olivia Todd who in turn showed Charles Darrow the game. Darrow would go on to popularize the game and to get Parker Brothers to start publishing the games years later. He even took credit for inventing the game we now know. The only thing I did not like about the book was that he spent a lot of time on tournament play toward the end of the book. It was exciting, but it really wasn't need to complete the story of the game. I would have left it out. Philip Orbanes not only adds the colorful history of the game, but he includes a knowledge of ecconomics, politics, history, all background stories to the book, making more than a book about the game, but a book about the United States and its rich history. This is a valuable book for everyone because it shows us what we actual miss in school about these subjects, but adds a sense of fun and reality to it. It was a joy to read and learn about this great game. I highly recommend this book. Enjoy I got this from the library for my 5-year-old who is suddenly a Monopoly nut, and I really enjoyed it! Lots of factoids about this bit of Americana, most notably how it survived as an underground game in the early 20th century with folks making their own boards and tokens, before the patents could be ironed out that would cause Parker Brothers to start really making money. The author credits this period with ironing out the rules and strategies, and causing the game to stand the test of time. We had it at my house, and my grandparents had it too! Monopoly is the world's most famous proprietary game: but why has it proven such an outstanding success over competitors? Monopoly, game fans and public libraries alike will find engrossing MONOPOLY: THE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUS GAME, which offers insight into the history and developers of the game. Chapters describe the game's creation, marketing, evolution, and attractions and include many insights on how the Internet and technological advancements have changed the game. Diane C. Donovan California Bookwatch This is a good, factual tale on the evolution of the classic board game. My primary frustration is that the author doesn't tie the game, and its evolution, to larger forces at play in society. This is an extremely informative book on the early history of monopoly, and how it went through its changes to become the cultural mainstay it is today, and likely will continue to be so. After the initial history, the author starts wandering off into his rather elementary perceptions of US history and how they affected the game. I seriously had to fight off the eye glazing effect for the rest of the book, though there are some parts of the author's firsthand accounts of Monopoly tournaments that are mildly interesting. For an Amazon bargain book, worth the money, otherwise no way. Average Rating:![]() |
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Philip Orbanes, master of all things Monopoliana, traces the remarkable story of the world's most famous board game, from its origins as a collegiate teaching tool in the early twentieth century through Monopoly's explosive growth in the postwar decades, to the game's current status as a fixture in homes across the globe... |
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Monopoly: The Story Behind the World's Best-Selling GameReviewsIf you are looking for a guidebook on developing strategies on winning Monopoly games, look elsewhere. This book does a fantastic job of explaining the history behind the streets and places printed on a Classic Monopoly gameboard. The postcards are diverse and even cover Baltic Avenue. The postcards are from when the Monopoly game was issued nationally and earlier. This book makes a great present for someone who enjoys playing Monopoly and wants to more about the background and real-world history of the locations on the traditional game. "Taking a walk on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City was an excursion into a wonderland of grand hotels, amusement piers stocked with colorful rides and marquee performers, and arcades full of games and sweet treats of every description. The Boardwalk was part avenue, part grandstand." ~ pg. 65 If you loved playing MONOPOLY and wondered how this game got it start, then this is the story behind this beloved pastime. Since the game is based on real-life locations in Atlantic City, this book is filled with lovely pictures of the area. The main chapters include: Go The Game - A Brief History of MONOPOLY The Place - A Brief History of Atlantic City The Railroads The Properties The Utilities Chance and Community Chest Free Parking Passing Go One of the most interesting pictures is one of the original circular game boards from 1933 and a square board from 1932. There is also a drawing of the origins of the game as patented by Lizzie Magie in 1904. Most of the book then focuses on the properties and other fun things like salt water taffy. ~The Rebecca Review This book is basically a history of Atlantic City during the time that the boardgame Monopoly was being invented. The book is not so much about the game itself but the locations that are on the game board. The book goes into the history of all the locations on the board by color and explained to the reader what Boardwalk was like in the 1930s or how Marvin Gardens got misspelled and other tidbits. It rather a short book overall and its give a pretty good understanding basic values of locations in terms of Atlantic City to the boardgame. Of course, the Atlantic City that being described in this book no longer exist. Much like St. Charles Place no longer exist but this book does allowed the reader to know that the game was based on actual locations that one time, had values which was reflected on the game board. I think that was the purpose of this book. The book was informative. The history of Atlantic City was interesting, but I was more interested in the game itself. I would like to see a book with more on the different editions of MONOPOLY and tons of pictures of games...not Atlantic City postcards. This is a great little book that takes a historical look at the game we all love and the story behind it. It starts off with a little bit of the history of the game itself, from Elizabeth Magie's original invention to the worldwide phenomenon the game became. However, the book mainly focuses on describing the streets, railroads and sites that have given their names to the game board spaces. The book describes them mostly as they were around the time that Monopoly was being invented. The book is beautifully illustrated with antique photographs and postcards, and shows Atlantic City in a more glamorous and classy era than the current neon-sign-and-big-hair place that it has become. While the book does not cover more than a little bit about the game itself, it does put it into a fun historical context. Average Rating:![]() |
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Most people probably dont think about the fact that the colored properties on the Monopoly board are based on real places in a real city, they just know that Monopoly was the best way to pass a rainy Saturday afternoon with family and friends... |
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MonopolyReviewsI'm a big Monopoly fan and I was really excited to get this game for the Wii. It's hard to get people to play with me, and games take so much longer when passing paper money around that having an electronic version of the game with computer AI makes a lot of sense. Unfortunately, there are some problems with the game that are serious enough that I can only give it three stars. Don't get me wrong, the core of the game is pretty good. It is classic Monopoly with all right rules, and options that let you play by "house rules" if you want (such as free parking having money on it). The animations aren't bad, and the computer players are actually pretty good. I've played the game several times now and found them enjoyable. However, there are some glaring issues that are really affecting my enjoyment of the game and my desire to replay it. 1. The save feature (which I call the "Not-Save" feature). This is the single worst problem in the game for me. Seriously EA, how hard would it be to allow a player to save the game when they want to quit? Despite the simplicity of saving progress in a game like Monopoly, there is no such feature. What the game actually has is a VERY poorly designed autosave feature, which means that if you quit, you lose all progress that has happened since the last autosave (and the game even tells you that). Now, that might not be so terrible if the autosave saved after every each round (a round being each time all the players have taken another single turn), but it doesn't. It seems completely unpredictable, and you can play for huge amounts of time without the game autosaving. The other night I quit a game in which all the properties were bought and I had almost won the game (and anyone familiar with Monopoly knows that takes quite a while), and when I turned the game on today to resume, I found that the last autosave had occurred about three turns into the game, and only four properties had been bought. In other words, I lost almost all the progress in the entire game. I've seen this several times and it is incredibly frustrating. Unless you have time to play the whole game (or can leave the game on forever without worrying that someone else in the house will want to play something else), then don't even both starting. You'll lose all your progress. And again, there is no way to save manually. 2. Unlocking new boards. The hoops you have to jump through to get a new board unlocked are ridiculous. Unlocking boards is based on a "passport system". The game claims you get a passport stamp for each property you own (not true), so for example if you own Park Place in a classic game, you get the park place stamp, and if you buy the monorail on the future board, you get the monorail stamp. Sort of like Monopoly at McDonald's where you try to get all the stamps, and when you get a certain number of passport stamps of new board will unlock. That wouldn't be so bad if the game actually did give you a passport for every property you owned. Then, if you won by bankrupting all the players, you would own all the properties, get passports for them all, and the board would be complete. Unfortunately, despite what EA says, you don't get passport stamps for owning properties. The game actually only gives you passport stamps for properties you LAND ON AND BUY. Buy a property in an auction? No stamp. Trade for a property and own it that way? No stamp. Bankrupt a player and become the owner of all his/her properties? No stamp. Want to play a four player AI game? Well, since you don't tend to land on and get many properties in a four player game, good luck every getting enough to unlock most of the later boards. Some boards, like the deco board, require you land on a buy every property in eight of the other boards. Since the whole landing on part is just random luck, unless I had months to keep trying, I suspect I'll never see any of the later boards in the game. Maybe if I do a "two player human vs human" game in which I am both players it will count towards my total, but how much fun is that? And I haven't tested that so I don't really know if that works anyway. 3. Incorrect space costs. Does anyone remember that traditionally in Monopoly, the Income Tax space has always said "$200 or 10%", and the Luxury tax space always said "$75"? Well, in the very most recent version of the Monopoly board game, Hasbro changed those spaces to "$200" and "$100", presumably to make them easier for people who can't do math. Of course, with a board game you can always draw on the correct values and play by the original tournament rules, but in this game you are out of luck. And that's a shame too, because since the game handles the math for you, it should be a no-brainer to stick to the official tournament rules. 4. Lack of settings to change. This is a minor gripe, but the music on some of the boards is very repetitive and there is no way to turn it off without turning off your speakers. And then you miss some of the verbal instructions or other voice effects, which you often do want to hear. Lastly, the top down view of the board isn't the greatest thing. It would be nice to be able to zoom in however you want, although the camera does a pretty good job of zooming in and following your peice as it moves. However, if these were the only flaws in the game, I'd probably give it five stars. These are just nice to haves and don't detract from the fun of the game like the first three items do. So anyway, my rating of this product is three stars. All the basics for a great game are there, but minor things like the save system, the board unlocking system, and the lack of proper tax space prices have really hurt what was otherwise a well done game. My family loves Monoply, so this was a lot of fun for us. It moves along Quickly and you don't have to spend the time setting up and picking up after. We play this a lot more than ever did the board game. Plus ther are different boards you can play on. Monopoly is 1 of my favorit game.... but i think the gameboard is more fun in real than the monopoly wii i dont like the wii monopoly sum people will enjoy but i didn't. Lots of different boards of monopoly to play and a lot easier than getting out the board game with all the pieces. The PC version is much better, the Wii version is ok, but it's a pain to play on it. The PC version has a keyboard and is much nicer. If I was going to buy this product again, I would really think twice. At $1-$5 its worth it, but not at the price I paid! 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Monopoly Here & Now Wii |
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Monopoly 2008ReviewsI've been playing Monopoly since grade school, starting with the classic board game and its many editions. (The classic is still my favorite.) Then computerized editions of course came along. Including a hand held LCD Monopoly game (which I think was produced by Tiger Electronics). This worked out great for me as I always had problems getting enough players together. As any one who has played the slew of these computerized versions knows that they haven't always been good. As a matter of fact some of them are pretty bad. But I always enjoyed them until the new version came along. This one however has some issues that I find very ridiculous and I'll cover them in a minute. (Believe it or not there are some really good things too which I want to cover first.) If it weren't for these I would have rated it one star... - Pros - - You can see the whole board at one time. I know this sounds simple but this is a very nice touch. - Graphics are clean, property cards are easy to read. - You don't have to sit through the insufferable AI player animations if you don't want to. - Easy modification of rules to something that will probably resemble your house rules. - The user interface is clean and doesn't really feel cluttered. - You can easily find out information about properties by simply letting your mouse rest on them. Nice. - Works with newer operating systems. Sweet! - Cons - - The AI cheats! After about a dozen or so games under my belt it's the only conclusion that I can come up with. These include but are certainly not limited to AI players always landing on unpurchased properties for the first several rounds. AI players who almost always receive positive Chance and Community Chest Cards. (On the other hand you will almost certainly NOT receive a positive card of any substantial amount.) AI players who will consistently land on your properties UNTIL you build houses or hotels. If a property is mortgaged then they will certainly land on it, that is until it's out of mortgage. (I know these are sounding like Murphys' Laws of Combat, but this is really the way the game plays.) Example I had one game where I had Free Parking to pay out $500, and double the Pass Go amount if you landed on Go. (This is very similar to the way I play with a board game. I had these options on almost always.) Wouldn't you know that I had one AI player hit each one of those every single turn, almost without fail. (Do you think I ever landed there? That's right I didn't... during my 12+ games I landed on the Free Parking space once, and landed on go about five times.) Mid-game this AI player had amassed over $5,000 wile I who own a little over a third of the board and owned one of the two only Monopolies in the game had only $300 average. I would like to point out that the other AI player who owned the other Monopoly had garnered a little over $3,000 in this same time period. Before you ask it wasn't Boardwalk and Park Place. I could go on but I think you can understand where I'm coming from here. - The higher the difficulty setting the more the AI cheats. - You can't save your custom rules, so expect on reimplementing them each time you play. - No bartering. This has been present in a few past titles and it was missed here as a result. Outside of the AI problems this is a really pleasant rendition of one of my favorite board games. I would not recommend it to someone who is new to the game but a familiar player who can overlook blatant cheating would find it fun. I think this is a fun game that hold true to the board game. You can play against one to three opponents. Those opponents can be "human" or computer player(s), or a combination of both. The computer player(s) can be set to one of three different skill levels. I have enjoyed the game the most when I have played against one other person or computer opponent. The game moves much more quickly than the board game and you can select from different options that make the game go by even faster, including dealing out part or all of the properties at the beginning. It allows you to set house rules for each game, such as receiving $500 for landing on Free Parking. One drawback is that you have to set the house rules over again after each game; the game doesn't allow you to save your favorite settings. Trades do seem to work a little strangely. The computer seems to look only at the face value of the properties, and not whether or not the property will give you a Monopoly. Overall I think the good parts of the game outweigh the bad, and I would recommend this as a great game for the whole family. The item came quickly and in great condition. I'm extremely satisfied with my purchase and would recomment buying from this seller. Although the game plays fairly well, with little or no freeze ups, getting support from the software company sucks big time. Don't waste your time trying. A simple question like "Can saved games be deleleted?, will get you a page and a half reply of why they can't answer YES or NO. By the way, you can delete saved games, however, it is a bit involved and you can't from the game software. It allows only four players. It is not as challenging as previous Monopoly games. Average Rating:![]() |
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Item #: N31306. The Monopoly 2008 PC is the world's most popular board game brought to life! Acquire wealth by buying and developing the Monopoly properties you know and love. It's all about money - and making more of it than your opponents... |
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MonopolyReviewsThis version is not like the 1995 Monopoly for PC by Westwood Studios. Pros: This edition has a much faster pace than the old PC game. A family of 4 can actually get through a game one night. The graphics in this game are very good. Trades are relatively easy. Cons: It may just be personal taste, but my family didn't care for the music in this game. It gets very repetitive. The Monopoly man narrating can give helpful tips at first but it becomes overly repetitive, and quite frankly, annoying. Playing with 4 members of your family or friends can be fun, but playing with 2 CPU (computer) characters is hardly worth the time. Computer characters are in cahoots with each other. They make lame trades with each other that no normal person would accept. There are not enough options to change. You can't change the music or shut off the monopoly man's comments. When my family plays we like to have a rule that no one may buy property until they travel once across the board. This version does not have this option. In this version not all payments go to Free Parking, only the taxes, which we do not like. There was no option to turn off Auctions. If you loved the old PC game you may be disappointed, it simply does not have the character that the Westwood version had. If you have never played the old game and have nothing to compare it to, then I suppose it's a pretty good game. Good: The graphics are okay and and the first few rounds of game play can be fun. There are different boards to choose which adds to the game-play. Bad: * The menu system is poorly designed. There is little distinction between selected buttons and non-selected. Selecting buttons is also buggy. * You can not turn off the voice tips which get annoying after hearing repeatedly. * The dice don't seem random enough. I rolled three consecutive doubles (which sends you to jail) about 4 times the first two games I played. * You have to sit through every action the AI makes. * This game takes longer to play than the real monopoly. I've read several reviews with mistaken details about the game. These are answers that i would have liked before i bought the game. First of all, you CAN play up to 4 people with just one controller. You have that option in the menu. You simply pass the one controller to the next players. I almost bought 2 more controllers because i wanted 4 people to be able to play. I'm glad i waited. Also, another reviewer wrote he was annoyed that if you played a one-player game, you had to play against 3 CPU opponents. In other words, each game had to have 4 players, whether they were CPU or a real person. That's not true either. If you want to play a 1-player game, you can cancel CPU players 3 and 4 and just play with one CPU opponent. As far as fun, i give this game 3 stars. I find that the game rolling the dice for you takes a lot of fun out of the game. In the board game, you control your roll. Sure, it's random, but least it's you who threw the dice. In this game, you hit X. As i was playing, i was imagining that my friends would rather play the board game. BUT, it's too soon to tell. I will try it out on them and check out their reaction. Graphics are good and the game boards are pretty cool. It's just not the "party" game i thought it would be. I love playing Monopoly, but am honestly not very good at it, so I bought this game to get some practice. The graphics are very nice and the variety of games is pretty cool, although they're not why I bought the game. That being said, playing the game itself is terribly dull. There is no option to only play against one other computer player, and there is no way to speed up the progress. It's usually several minutes before it would come back around to my turn, and while that may be ok when playing with people, it really makes it boring when you're alone. Also, I'm sure it's completely random, but I reset the game 5 times in a row, and each time, I was the last player and once it was my turn, the computer players had bought up half of the board. I just really don't like that I have to play against three players and that it moves so slowly, without a fair ability to buy up properties before they're all gone. Pretty Good. We've enjoyed playing it. It's nice because it's something parents and kids can do together, and there's no worry about there being anything inappropriate like so many of the video games. Better than the board game because there's no clean up! Average Rating:![]() |
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Mortal Kombat: Deception pushes martial arts-style fighting and the Mortal Kombat franchise to new heights with an innovative fighting system, unparalleled depth and brutally intense action that will appeal to long-time Mortal Kombat fans as well as next-generation gamers... |
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New Orleans Saints Super Bowl XLIV Champions Monopoly |
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The Saints are marching back to Nawlins with their first Super Bowl Championship! The MONOPOLY® brand proudly presents the New Orleans Saints Super Bowl XLIV Champions Collectors Edition. Buy, sell and trade Drew Brees, Reggie Bush, Darren Sharper, Marques Colston and Robert Meachem in an effort to own the NFLs best... |
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USAopoly Family Guy MonopolyReviewsI purchased this item for my grandson. His dad and the neighborhood children have played this game non-stop the first day they received it. The game of Monopoly is a classic but this version gave it a new meaning with the TV's popular show.It appears to be however a "guy" fun thing. We've got several versions of Monopoly around our house, some of which now reside more-or-less permanently in the garage. So when my 13-year son included a Family Guys Monopoly game as part of his holiday list, I viewed it with disfavor. "You can use one of the others," I insisted. But he wouldn't be dissuaded; he really wanted *this* version. To be fair, he hasn't chosen any of the other Monopoly sets we have (regular, junior, National Parks, Disney edition), something the rest of us have had an opportunity to do. So I gave in and got it for him for Christmas. We've been playing it a lot since then. He and his 21-year old sister, both of whom are very familiar with Family Guy, LOVE this version. They laugh and talk and reminisce over bits and pieces from different shows as they progress around the board. I freely admit that I am lost, but I really don't mind being so. My kids are having a wonderful time with this version of Monopoly and that's what it's important. I remember sitting around with my family and playing Monopoly when I was their age. It's an enduring tradition, whether or not one lands on Peter's Fishing Boat or Reading Railroad. I'm glad my kids will remember good times with this quintessentially American board game, too. Hopefully this will be a fun game. Bought it for an Xmas present so I cannot give a full review until then. But it looks great! very happy with this product. Brand new and sent exactly the way it was described. Very pleased and will use this seller in the future. Very fun. I am a huge family guy fan and they did a great job in making the references comical and random. It made an awesome gift. Average Rating:![]() |
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Quahog's prime real estate is up for sale in an irreverent and "sweet" new version of America's favorite board game. Perfect for any Family Guy fan, this board game includes six collectible Family Guy pewter tokens. |
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USAopoly Wizard of Oz LifeReviewsI love this game! I am a huge Wizard of Oz fan and I have always loved the game of Life, so this combination of both is awesome! My kids loved playing the game with me, as they too have inherited my love of Wiz. I think it teaches kids that decisions have consequences, some good and some bad (you have to choose whether to be a good witch or bad witch throughout the game). We loved it!! This game is recommended for ages 9+. Kids have to be fairly good readers to participate or have adults playing along to help. Some of the rules are hard to understand at first, but after several games they become clearer. I would recommend children playing with an adult unless they are older or more advanced. It is somewhat complex in its strategies like Monopoly. We did create a few new rules in order to play with some younger children. Still fun, as the game recreates the entire story of the Wizard of Oz. The markers shaped as Dorothy's shoes were disappointing. We thought they should have been sparkly or glittered like the real ones. Just a small detail, but one that disappointed the smaller kids. I bought this game because I am a big Wizard of Oz fan (I'm an adult). The Wizard of Oz aspects are all very cool, but the game itself is boring. It is not nearly as good as the Twist and Turns life game. No challenge. I played it twice and got rid of it. This version is FABULOUS! Rather lengthy to set up (only a one-time deal), but so much fun. Even our 5yr old enjoyed playing!! He played the entire 2hrs!. I'm sure that once you have all the facets memorized, the game will take a shorter time. We plan to purchase this for Christmas presents for friends and family. We had such a good time! If you love the Wizard of Oz, I think you will love this game. It is very different from the Game of Life, however. Instead of choosing to go to college or start your career, you choose to follow Glinda and become a good witch or follow the Wicked Witch and become wicked. You move around in different colored slippers and collect munchkins instead of children. There are several spots where you can choose a path to follow, such as to follow the flying monkeys or follow Glinda's bubble, each with its own advantages and disadvantages. You can also choose to make an Over the Rainbow Investment in a certain number on the spinner. I love this game! Average Rating:![]() |
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Features all new The Wizard Of Oz-themed game play with custom game board, buildings, spinner?and?four?old friends as movers. |
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