The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Makingmono­poly a worldwide hit

The ‘love it or hate it’ games-night stalwart has celebrated its 85th birthday. Luke Rixstandin­g looks back on its story...

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O h the irony, the cruel, cruel irony, that a game invented to warn of the dangers of predator capitalism, should become the victim of an intellectu­al theft worth millions.

In 1904, Illinois-born Elizabeth Magie patented The Landlord’s Game – a board game centred on rents, mortgages, properties and realties. There were four railway stations, water and electricit­y franchises, and a jailhouse supervised by the villainous English aristocrat, Lord Blueblood. The only way out of jail was to pay a fine, or – stop us if you’ve heard this one – roll a double.

An educated, opinionate­d, and financiall­y self-sufficient stenograph­er who did not marry until her mid-40s, Magie had strong left-wing principles, and railed against the Rockefelle­rs and Carnegies who, in her mind, were growing fat off the working man.

Her game was intended as a parable, a case study in systemic unfairness, in which land-grabbing plutocrats could freely cheat, extort, and grind their opponents into the dust.

“Children of nine or 10 can easily understand the game,” she said.

“Let them once see clearly the gross injustice of our present land system, and when they grow up, if they are allowed to develop naturally, the situation will soon be remedied.”

The game enjoyed moderate success – mostly on college campuses, and among the political left.

Fast forward to 1935, and a very different tale emerges. The story, printed alongside the game’s instructio­ns in later editions, was that Monopoly emerged from the ashes of the Great Depression, the brainchild of down-on-his-luck Philadelph­ia native Charles Darrow.

Through a mixture of wit, wisdom and the American Dream, Darrow masterfull­y conceived a game that would lift him out of poverty, and wind up on the shelves of millions around the world. There were four railway stations, water and electricit­y franchises, and a jailhouse, from which one could escape by rolling a double.

You don’t need to be a genius, or even a landowner, to work out what happened. Magie’s game had been pilfered, and the rebrand contained, in her own words, “nothing different under the sun”.

She wasn’t quite right. Gone was the satirical pessimism of The Landlord’s Game, in its place a more corporate sensibilit­y, overseen by the now-iconic

Monopoly Man. Mustachioe­d, portly, and clad in top hat and tails, the character was officially named Rich Uncle Pennybags, and bore a suspicious resemblanc­e to billionair­e financier JP Morgan.

Whether you cite sexism, copyright law, or simply that history is written by the winners, Monopoly’s original inventor still gets little credit for her creation. Darrow became the first ever millionair­e game designer; Magie died in 1948, unheralded and extremely annoyed.

Questionab­le though his legacy may be, there’s no doubting Darrow’s design is the one we play today. He fashioned the first board from a disused oilcloth, carved houses and hotels from wood, and made chance cards written by hand.

The classic counters – battleship, race car, thimble, top hat – were derived from a charm bracelet worn by Darrow’s niece, while the all-caps word MONOPOLY has enjoyed the same spot on the board for the last 85 years.

Darrow learned of The Landlord’s Game from friends in 1933, but despite the road-tested rule-book, it took him two years to see his version to sale.

Darrow’s first Monopoly set centred around Atlantic City, New Jersey, but the first licensed creation focused on the historic streets and squares of London, and the game was an instant hit both sides of the Atlantic.

Although its ability to spark family arguments is matched only by Bridge, the game proved an exercise in wishfulfil­ment for societies still reeling from the Wall Street Crash. In Monopoly, prosperity was just a roll away, and destitutio­n lost you nothing more than pride.

Today, inflation has dampened the fantasy, as a standard set has a total bank of just 20,580.

The game’s global fan base has turned Monopoly into a spectator sport. To date, there have been 14 Monopoly World Championsh­ips, most recently in Macau in 2015, contested by national champions put forward by regional Monopoly authoritie­s. Japan and Italy have brought the title home twice.

Parker Brothers was acquired by Hasbro in 1991, and Monopoly’s new paymasters have proven slightly more willing to experiment with the formula. In 2018, Hasbro released the Monopoly Cheater’s Edition, perhaps the most ambitious incarnatio­n to date, in which players can steal bills and skip rent under the tagline: ‘How much can you get away with?’

If the history of Monopoly is any guide, the answer is quite a lot.

 ??  ?? Popular board game Monopoly proved an exercise in wish-fulfilment for societies still reeling from the Wall Street Crash.
Popular board game Monopoly proved an exercise in wish-fulfilment for societies still reeling from the Wall Street Crash.
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