Monopoly
- Monopoly (1975 on Wang 2200)
- Monopoly (1977 on Mainframe)
- Monopoly (1979 on TRS-80)
-
Monopoly
(1984 on
Commodore 64, 1985 on
ZX Spectrum,
BBC Micro...)
-
Monopoly
(1985 on
DOS)
-
Monopoly
(1988 on
SEGA Master System)
-
Monopoly
(1993 on
DOS, 1994 on
Amiga)
-
Monopoly
(1993 on
SNES)
-
Monopoly
(1995 on
Windows,
Windows 16-bit, 1996 on
Macintosh)
-
Monopoly
(1997 on
PlayStation)
-
Monopoly
(1999 on
Windows, 2000 on
Macintosh)
-
Monopoly
(1999 on
Game.Com)
-
Monopoly
(1999 on
DOS)
-
Monopoly
(1999 on
Nintendo 64)
-
Monopoly
(2002 on
Windows)
-
Monopoly
(2004 on
Game Boy Advance)
-
Monopoly
(2008 on
J2ME,
iPod Classic)
-
Monopoly
(2009 on
iPhone, 2010 on
iPad, 2011 on
Macintosh...)
-
Monopoly
(2010 on
PSP,
PlayStation 3, 2012 on
PS Vita)
-
Monopoly
(2010 on
Nintendo DS)
-
Monopoly
(2012 on
Macintosh,
Windows)
-
Monopoly
(2017 on
Nintendo Switch, 2020 on
Stadia)
-
Monopoly
(2019 on
iPhone,
iPad, 2020 on
Android)
-
Monopoly
(2024 on
Windows)
Description official descriptions
From Sculptured Software comes an adaptation of the classic board game Monopoly for the dominating console systems of the early 90s (later also ported to Game Boy Color).
The game can be played by up to eight players (only four in the Game Boy versions). Any number of positions can be taken over by computer opponents. The game comes with eight different opponents, which are selected from a portrait gallery (8- and 16-bit versions feature different names and portraits).
It is possible to set up a time limit for a game, and also to customize the game. Amount of starting money, owned properties, houses and hotels can be set for any player before starting. The game also comes with a number of preset scenarios with varied starting parameters. The 8-bit versions have eight scenarios, the 16-bit versions add another four. The Game Boy versions also feature the scenarios, but don't have the customization option.
During gameplay, the board is seen from the top. Moving tokens are displayed in a special animation in the center of the board, as is a hand throwing the dice. Auctions and trades take place on special screens, with the 16-bit versions being more elaborately animated and illustrated.
Spellings
- モノポリー - Japanese spelling
Groups +
Screenshots
Promos
Credits (NES version)
8 People
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 69% (based on 32 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.9 out of 5 (based on 25 ratings with 1 reviews)
A good game, if you liked the board game you'll love the video game!
The Good
It's just as fun as the board game plus you can play with up to seven other people, who can be friend's (you'll have to share the controller) or Computerizer's. It's easy to learn how to play and it's fun.
The Bad
After playing for a couple month's it gets extremely easy to win and therefor looses it's fun, and you can alter the difficulty setting of the computer player's.
The Bottom Line
A great game for kids, especially if you like the board game, but when you get older it gets to easy.
SNES · by darthsith19 (62) · 2014
Analytics
Related Sites +
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Howard & Nester do Monopoly
A regular feature in Nintendo Power magazine, Howard & Nester was a comic strip about two game whizzes who would one-up each other, while disclosing hints and tips, in the settings of various recently-released games for the NES platform. In Volume 24's installment, Howard teaches Nester the shifting value of a Get Out of Jail Free card.
Identifiers +
Contribute
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Terok Nor.
Additional contributors: Freeman, Pseudo_Intellectual.
Game added August 30, 2014. Last modified August 8, 2024.