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Monopoly | |
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PlayStation 3 version cover art | |
Developer(s) |
Leisure Genius (1985/1988) Virgin Games (1991) Westwood Studios (1995) Gremlin Interactive (1997) Mind's Eye Productions (1999) Runecraft (2002) EA Bright Light (2008) |
Publisher(s) |
Leisure Genius (1985/1988) Leisure Genius (1991) Hasbro Interactive (1995) Infogrames (2002) Electronic Arts (2008) Ubisoft (2014) |
Composer(s) | Ian Livingstone (2008) |
Series | Monopoly |
Engine | RenderWare (2008 version) |
Platform(s) | Amstrad CPC, BBC Micro, BlackBerry, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, Game Boy, Game Boy Advance, GameCube, Game.com, Nintendo 64, Nintendo DS, Nintendo Entertainment System, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable, iOS, Pocket PC/Windows Mobile, Genesis, Master System, Super NES, Microsoft Windows, Wii, Xbox 360, ZX Spectrum |
Release |
(ZX/CPC) 1985 (C64) 1988 (PC 1991) 1991 (PC 1995) September 30, 1995 (PS1 1997) 1997 (PS2/PS3/X360/Wii 2008) October 24, 2008 |
Genre(s) | Board game |
Mode(s) | Standard, Richest |
There have been more than a dozen video game adaptations of Parker Brothers and Hasbro's highly successful board game Monopoly.
Many unlicensed, non-commercial computer games based on Monopoly were distributed on bulletin board systems, public domain software disks and academic computer systems, and appeared as early as the late 1970s. At the time, Parker Brothers was unaware of this distribution until a user informed them of one version that stated "A Parker Brother game" on the title screen; the company then began enforcing its copyright and trademark on Monopoly.[1]
Over the years, Monopoly has been released for different operating systems on the PC and Macintosh platforms. The first of the legally licensed commercial adaptations began in 1985 for the BBC Micro, Amstrad CPC and ZX Spectrum. Versions have been licensed and produced for the Nintendo Entertainment System, Super NES, Game Boy, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo 64, GameCube, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, Master System, Genesis, Xbox, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable, and Wii consoles, as well as mobile device (PDA/Smartphone) versions.[citation needed]
The Monopoly video games play by the same rules as the standard board game, allowing for single or multiplayer games. When a single player game is chosen, the game in question would generate computer-controlled opponents.[citation needed]
Monopoly for the PlayStation was developed by Gremlin Interactive, and a Windows and Macintosh version by Westwood Studios. The Windows/Mac version played top down, while the PlayStation version was in 3D. They both had cutscenes in common, played when showing the game pieces moving on their own.[2] In 1998, Hasbro Interactive released a Monopoly video game for Microsoft Windows, which used 3D graphics instead of the top-down design used in previous versions. It ran on Windows 95 (although can be run on up to Windows XP, but won't work on Windows Vista and up) and had a special online play feature which used a modem.[citation needed]
A new version developed by Electronic Arts was released in 2008 for the Wii, PlayStation 3, iPhone and Xbox 360, with a slightly stripped-down version for the PlayStation 2. It includes a transatlantic selection of boards, including the new Here & Now edition boards and new game mode, Richest. There are no online features, however.[citation needed] EA's Monopoly game scored fairly poorly, with a 54% average on the PS3 on Metacritic,[3] and 56% on the Xbox 360.[4] The Wii version fared better with 70%.[5] The Official Nintendo Magazine in the UK were most positive in their evaluation of the Wii version, which they called "great fun" in the Christmas 2008 issue.[6] Eurogamer was less enthusiastic, saying: "For the price of Monopoly for Wii, you could buy real Monopoly. Twice. Or you could just buy no Monopoly at all and spend the money on something more likely to inspire amity and harmony, like a book by Hitler."[7]
The Monopoly Family Fun Pack, produced by Ubisoft for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, was released on November 18, 2014. It is an on-disc bundle consisting of the digitally-released Monopoly Plus and Monopoly Deal, as well as Monopoly Plus's My Monopoly expansion.[8] In 2017, Ubisoft will release a more traditional Monopoly video game on the Nintendo Switch, which will take advantage of the Joy-Con's "HD Rumble" feature.[9]
An electronic handheld version of the game was marketed from 1997–2001.[10]
An online version of Monopoly that used Google Maps as the board[11] was live for several months in 2009.[citation needed]
As it turns out, the company has been completely unaware of what was going on. It was not until a user named David Addison made and distributed a particularly detailed version of the game on the Amiga that Parker Brothers became aware of the problem. This program contained the phrase "A Parker Brother game" on its title screen, which apparently made someone think that Parker Brothers might be interested. They were not only interested, but appalled to learn how many computer versions were being circulated.
History | |||||
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Game designers and early publishers | |||||
Related games | |||||
Hasbro Monopoly and licensees | |||||
Modern variants | |||||
Spin-off games |
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Monopoly on television | |||||
Monopoly metaphors and idioms | |||||
See also |
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0. There is a list of all authors in Wikipedia
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