classical_hero
In whom I trust
And they reward themselves with some extra cash when no one else is looking. So just like real life.
That is why I normally nominate for the position.


And they reward themselves with some extra cash when no one else is looking. So just like real life.
In one game I managed to get a chance card where I was able to swap one property for Mayfar.
Yeah, my kids are going to learn Perudo and Dominion instead of that tripe.Indeed. Why anyone would want to play that when there are so many fun and challenging boardgames available, beats me.
That aint no chance card I ever heard of![]()
Statistically speaking, the best properties to have a monopoly in are the Oranges. I speak from personal experience: I went bankrupt (or nearly so) landing on those a lot more than I ever did on Boardwalk/Park Place. This is a strategy I found in The Winner's Guide to Boardgames (a fascinating book that looks at everything from kids' games to Dungeons & Dragons).The article's author thinks the game is entirely about chance? Not at all. No wonder he always got beat. There is a ton of strategy that should go into the game. Sure, a bad roll can hurt you, but there's alot more to the game than that.
Statistically speaking, the best properties to have a monopoly in are the Oranges. I speak from personal experience: I went bankrupt (or nearly so) landing on those a lot more than I ever did on Boardwalk/Park Place. This is a strategy I found in The Winner's Guide to Boardgames (a fascinating book that looks at everything from kids' games to Dungeons & Dragons).
As for the tokens, I always liked the dog - just because I like dogs, not for any socioeconomic statement. And if your favorite token is no longer included in the game, you can always buy one on eBay. I had no idea what an amazing variety of tokens have been made for the various editions until I started collecting cat and dog-related ones.
Socialism: The Game isn't half as much fun.
The article's author thinks the game is entirely about chance? Not at all. No wonder he always got beat. There is a ton of strategy that should go into the game. Sure, a bad roll can hurt you, but there's alot more to the game than that.
Monopoly is pretty much entirely chance based.
And most of the rest is getting some gullible fool at the table who will actually trade stuff.
As to the pieces, weren't they just extras from other games that were lying around in the Parker Brothers warehouse when the first boards were produced?
Pretty sure thats wrong. The oranges are second best to the railroads.
I've only played the regular Monopoly. But I've got a "make your own -Opoly" game kit, and have been talking it over with some friends on my Cheezburger site. I won't have any of them close enough to play it with me, but just for the fun of it, I'm in the midst of designing a Cheezlandopoly edition. That's why I've been collecting animal-related tokens. Some years ago, somebody designed a Dune version. I did download the board (very nice one), but I'm not sure which computer it's on.What variants of Monopoly have you played?
I have a LotR version where one die have instead of the 1, you have the ring on it, which moves the ring one spot and if you land on a square with the ring on it and you don't own it and someone else dies, then you pay double. If it is unclaimed, then you get it for free. The game ends whn the ring gets to Mount Doom, thus you know the game won't go on forever.
Jail is where you go when you get banned (see my previous post). In your suggestion, this could be the equivalent of the card where you have an expensive hospital bill (pay $200, I think?).You suffer an ad hominem attack. Go directly to jail. Do not pass GO. Do not collect $200.