Monopoly Here And Now
Yesterday was Kelsey’s birthday party - 8 screaming boys all ages 6-9 (plus a tagalong 2yo) going full-force for two hours. Wow… whodathunk that it would have tired us all out so much? The boys all fell straight asleep the instant they got home, without even complaining that it was time to go to bed. I fell asleep within ten minutes of my head hitting the pillow - amazing enough in itself - and then slept for 11 hours. Double wow!
So anyhow, today we just kinda vegged out. I did get a bunch of dishes done and some laundry and cleaned the science experiments out of the fridge, but other than that we just vegged.
One of Kel’s birthday presents he received yesterday was Monopoly - Here & Now. I’ve been looking forward to cracking this open, as I used to love the original edition. The older 4 of us played it (Alex kept trying to help, much to our dismay) and we had fun… but it really did last too long. Brendon quit after 2 1/2 hours, Kelsey and I were ready to quit at 4 hours and convinced Mike to pack it up. He wanted to keep everything set as it was so we could continue the play later. His words - “but I like it when somebody actually WINS!” - meaning him of course, LOL.
Next time, we’ll play the “short game” way: agree before starting on an end time, deal each player 2 properties right off the bat that they must pay for, and whoever is worth the most (cash and properties) at the ending time wins. Period.
I have 3 complaints:
If you’re considering getting this for your family and have kids ages 10 and under, I’d really go for the original version. There’s no benefit to this version besides more “hip” or “cool” tokens, and those aren’t worth $30 on their own. Monopoly has always been such a great educational game because it taught kids realistically about money in a fantasy setting; with real dollar amounts that kids could really put their hands on ($1, $5, $10, etc). Here And Now takes the “realistic” angle out of it completely by using money amounts of 10k, 50k, 100k, 200k, 500k, 1million, 5million. The entire game becomes fantasy, nothing to care about; just a game… and the thought of having REAL money and doing this for REAL just flies out the window. Stick with the original.
Despite those problems though, we had fun. It was nice having a family game going that wasn’t a video game, and I’d like to find a way to make it a weekly ritual. Shorter games, though!
Ones I’d like to get that I remember from childhood are: TriOminos, Uno, Skip-Bo, Boggle. I’m also planning on getting Blokus for Brendon for his birthday in May (he really wanted it for Christmas but it didn’t fit into our budget), and I’m thinking about getting Set as well.
If you’ve got any suggestions for COOPERATIVE games that are fun for families, please, lemme hear ‘em! (Okay, even Xbox 360 games, sigh… lol.)
What do you think? I wanna know! Please leave a comment :)
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Jose said,
Wrote on February 26, 2007 @ 10:31 am
It’s been ages since I played monopoly for that one particular reason… it takes too long! We enjoy playing yatzee and a Mexican game called “Loteria” which is a variation of bingo.
Thanks for the comment of the HD dealership, supposedly they are all to upgrade their buildings but last Saturday we were in California and I visited Harley Davidson of Glendale, home of the “Love Ride” and they are still keeping the small family atmosphere dealership.
Carrie said,
Wrote on February 27, 2007 @ 1:23 pm
Hey Jose! Thanks for coming by.
I thought about buying Yahtzee and then thought “well wait, I wonder if anyone’s got the scorecards online…”
Google to the rescue!
Found some printable yahtzee scoring cards and after that I just needed dice - 97 cents at WalMart.
The big new dealerships *are* impressive, but pretty daunting, too. Makes the Hogs seem just that more unobtainable and expensive, so people might not even bother going in and seeing what the prices are.