Develop property as aggressively as you can. Early on in the game, players tend to. But Monopoly doesn't let you build on single properties. If you plan on building any houses or hotels, you've got to invest in complete sets. And so the previous graph — although it demonstrates why so many people go for Boardwalk — doesn't quite tell the whole story.
How to always win at monopoly and other secrets of the Federal Reserve
April 3, 2010Imagine you belong to a large Monopoly club where you play for a big prize.
But you grow weary of the win some, lose some results you have been having lately. So with a little persuasion, your fiercest competitors agree to pool resources with you so all are assured a piece of the grand prize.
After all, winning in this game is too important to leave to chance.
What would you need to rig this game?
To properly rig this game you need all of the following:
- A commitment by a few that a large piece of the whole pie is better than no pie at all.
- A printer to print monopoly money as needed.
- Agreement from the majority of game playing community that the game will end and everyone will lose big if they don't let you feed more money into the game.
- A name for your scheme that makes people feel good about it.
So how do you set this all up?
Timing is everything. If you start the game with this grand scheme, your motives will be transparent and no one will play with you.
No you wait until you are well into the game and the major monopolies have emerged and the rest of the players are hoping to figure out how to get out with their shirts on.
Next, start having conversations about how bad some people are going to get hurt because the monopolies have taken over and suggesting ways to level the playing field.
The problem you say is, 'there is but a finite amount of money and it is consolidated into the hands of a few greedy players.' You suggest putting more money into the game, making it available to the other players so they can keep their stake.
There will be an interest charge of course, but that is just the cost of doing business.
You convince people that the loaned money will actually come out of a reserve based on the value of the assets in the play. The best way to do this is with a catchy name like The Monopoly Reserve.
You convince the players that, you and your alliance will put up the wealth to start the Monopoly Reserve and since you are taking the risk, you get to earn the interest.
So with a stroke of a pen the Monopoly Reserve (MR) is created. Once the MR is created, it can now loan money. The first loan it makes is to you and your buddies. You take the loaned money you just received and use that to fund the MR.
Nothing comes out of your pocket, but by slight of hand, the MR is now fully funded.
Where does the MR get the money to make the loan?
It gets it from a checkbook of course. The MR chairman agrees to loan you money and writes a check. It is as simple as that, the money is created out of thin air.
Now you take your check for $1 Billion Monos (monopoly currency), walk over to your computer and have it print $1 Billion monos to loan to the players.
Joe Smidwich decides he needs money to buy hotels for Park Place. Fine you say, how much do you need?
$10 Million monos. No problem, that will be 7% interest and we need to hold the hotels and Park Place as collateral. With a handshake the deal is done.
You are now earning 7% interest in real monos for the basically counterfeit monos you just injected into the system.
Monopoly Tips And Strategies - How Monopoly Works
We've covered a lot, so lets recap before we go on.
- A check that is not attached to any account or assets is written giving your group $1 billion monos.
- You loan $10 million worthless monos to Joe Smidwidh for 7% interest and hold all the title to his property
- Without costing you a cent or putting any of your assets at risk, you are earning $700,000 monos
Cool Huh?
How To Always Win At Monopoly Vons
Here is where you really score. After you make enough of these basically risk free loans, someone is bound to default and you stand to lose the interest you would have earned.
This is very bad, you threaten to shut down the money supply and in effect shut down the whole game if you can not be assured you will get your money back.
The players get worried. They have too much invested at this point and they know they can win the game if they just have more time. They will do anything.
Well ok, but we will need a percent of all the income of the game to protect us from losses. If you will pay this small income tax, we will keep the money supply open.
Are you keeping up so far? Lightning link legal.
- Money you create out of nothing earns interest.
- The rules now obligate all citizens of the game to pay interest in the form of a TAX on the bogus money you inject into the system.
But wait there is more insane profit to be had.
Scarcity supports perceived value. Abundance reduces perceived value. You know by simply injecting money into the system, the value of the mono is going to fall.
The players will think of it as inflation, but in reality, your little paper dollars are losing value.
But the loss of value is not immediate. When you get the money, and the first time you put it into the game, it is perceived as having current value. So you quickly spend it on property and hotels or whatever.
But now that all this money is in the system, other players see it as plentiful and spend more for the same assets than they did before the money was available. When they spend more, that means someone earned more and you get more tax dollars.
Here is where you are now.
[/list]
- Money you create out of nothing earns interest.
- The rules now obligate all citizens of the game to pay interest in the form of a TAX on the bogus money you inject into the system.
- When you inject the money into the system, only your group gets full value, everyone else is stuck with deflated dollars.
- But with more dollars in the system you get more tax revenues.
The game is now dependent on you.
That's right by controlling the money, the players now know they must have you if they want to stay in the game. And, not staying in the game means they lose everything.
Could this happen in real life?
It's not your imagination. This is how the Federal Reserve got started and operates today.
In November of 1910, seven men representing an estimated ¼ of the wealth of the entire world attended a clandestine meeting on Nelson W. Aldrich's Jekyll Island off the coast of Georgia. In attendance were: Soccer on scratch.
- Nelson W. Aldrich, Republican Whip and business associate of J.P. Morgan
- Abraham Piatt Andrew, Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury
- Frank A. Vanderlip, President of the National City Bank of New York and representing William Rockefeller, and the international investment banking house of Kuhn, Loeb & Company.
- Henry P. Davidson, senior partner of J.P Morgan Company.
- Charles D. Norton, President of J.P. Morgans First National Bank of New York
- Benjamin Strong, Head of J.P. Morgan's banker's Trust Company
- Paul M. Warburg, partner in Kuhn, Loeb & Company and head of the Warburg banking consortium in Germany and the Nederlands.
While it took several years to play out, the final outcome of this fateful meeting was the Federal Reserve Act of 1913.
The first attempt to put the Jekyll Island plan into action was the Aldrich Bill but it was met with resistance and soon defeated. With that name it seemed like a consolidation of even more monetary power into the hands of the super wealthy.
How To Always Win At Monopoly Money
A better name was needed to inspire the confidence of the masses. Whether a flash of brilliance or a laborious endeavor, the name The Federal Reserve System emerged. Vegas dice game.
How to always win at monopoly and other secrets of the Federal Reserve
April 3, 2010Imagine you belong to a large Monopoly club where you play for a big prize.
But you grow weary of the win some, lose some results you have been having lately. So with a little persuasion, your fiercest competitors agree to pool resources with you so all are assured a piece of the grand prize.
After all, winning in this game is too important to leave to chance.
What would you need to rig this game?
To properly rig this game you need all of the following:
- A commitment by a few that a large piece of the whole pie is better than no pie at all.
- A printer to print monopoly money as needed.
- Agreement from the majority of game playing community that the game will end and everyone will lose big if they don't let you feed more money into the game.
- A name for your scheme that makes people feel good about it.
So how do you set this all up?
Timing is everything. If you start the game with this grand scheme, your motives will be transparent and no one will play with you.
No you wait until you are well into the game and the major monopolies have emerged and the rest of the players are hoping to figure out how to get out with their shirts on.
Next, start having conversations about how bad some people are going to get hurt because the monopolies have taken over and suggesting ways to level the playing field.
The problem you say is, 'there is but a finite amount of money and it is consolidated into the hands of a few greedy players.' You suggest putting more money into the game, making it available to the other players so they can keep their stake.
There will be an interest charge of course, but that is just the cost of doing business.
You convince people that the loaned money will actually come out of a reserve based on the value of the assets in the play. The best way to do this is with a catchy name like The Monopoly Reserve.
You convince the players that, you and your alliance will put up the wealth to start the Monopoly Reserve and since you are taking the risk, you get to earn the interest.
So with a stroke of a pen the Monopoly Reserve (MR) is created. Once the MR is created, it can now loan money. The first loan it makes is to you and your buddies. You take the loaned money you just received and use that to fund the MR.
Nothing comes out of your pocket, but by slight of hand, the MR is now fully funded.
Where does the MR get the money to make the loan?
It gets it from a checkbook of course. The MR chairman agrees to loan you money and writes a check. It is as simple as that, the money is created out of thin air.
Now you take your check for $1 Billion Monos (monopoly currency), walk over to your computer and have it print $1 Billion monos to loan to the players.
Joe Smidwich decides he needs money to buy hotels for Park Place. Fine you say, how much do you need?
$10 Million monos. No problem, that will be 7% interest and we need to hold the hotels and Park Place as collateral. With a handshake the deal is done.
You are now earning 7% interest in real monos for the basically counterfeit monos you just injected into the system.
Monopoly Tips And Strategies - How Monopoly Works
We've covered a lot, so lets recap before we go on.
- A check that is not attached to any account or assets is written giving your group $1 billion monos.
- You loan $10 million worthless monos to Joe Smidwidh for 7% interest and hold all the title to his property
- Without costing you a cent or putting any of your assets at risk, you are earning $700,000 monos
Cool Huh?
How To Always Win At Monopoly Vons
Here is where you really score. After you make enough of these basically risk free loans, someone is bound to default and you stand to lose the interest you would have earned.
This is very bad, you threaten to shut down the money supply and in effect shut down the whole game if you can not be assured you will get your money back.
The players get worried. They have too much invested at this point and they know they can win the game if they just have more time. They will do anything.
Well ok, but we will need a percent of all the income of the game to protect us from losses. If you will pay this small income tax, we will keep the money supply open.
Are you keeping up so far? Lightning link legal.
- Money you create out of nothing earns interest.
- The rules now obligate all citizens of the game to pay interest in the form of a TAX on the bogus money you inject into the system.
But wait there is more insane profit to be had.
Scarcity supports perceived value. Abundance reduces perceived value. You know by simply injecting money into the system, the value of the mono is going to fall.
The players will think of it as inflation, but in reality, your little paper dollars are losing value.
But the loss of value is not immediate. When you get the money, and the first time you put it into the game, it is perceived as having current value. So you quickly spend it on property and hotels or whatever.
But now that all this money is in the system, other players see it as plentiful and spend more for the same assets than they did before the money was available. When they spend more, that means someone earned more and you get more tax dollars.
Here is where you are now.
[/list]
- Money you create out of nothing earns interest.
- The rules now obligate all citizens of the game to pay interest in the form of a TAX on the bogus money you inject into the system.
- When you inject the money into the system, only your group gets full value, everyone else is stuck with deflated dollars.
- But with more dollars in the system you get more tax revenues.
The game is now dependent on you.
That's right by controlling the money, the players now know they must have you if they want to stay in the game. And, not staying in the game means they lose everything.
Could this happen in real life?
It's not your imagination. This is how the Federal Reserve got started and operates today.
In November of 1910, seven men representing an estimated ¼ of the wealth of the entire world attended a clandestine meeting on Nelson W. Aldrich's Jekyll Island off the coast of Georgia. In attendance were: Soccer on scratch.
- Nelson W. Aldrich, Republican Whip and business associate of J.P. Morgan
- Abraham Piatt Andrew, Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury
- Frank A. Vanderlip, President of the National City Bank of New York and representing William Rockefeller, and the international investment banking house of Kuhn, Loeb & Company.
- Henry P. Davidson, senior partner of J.P Morgan Company.
- Charles D. Norton, President of J.P. Morgans First National Bank of New York
- Benjamin Strong, Head of J.P. Morgan's banker's Trust Company
- Paul M. Warburg, partner in Kuhn, Loeb & Company and head of the Warburg banking consortium in Germany and the Nederlands.
While it took several years to play out, the final outcome of this fateful meeting was the Federal Reserve Act of 1913.
The first attempt to put the Jekyll Island plan into action was the Aldrich Bill but it was met with resistance and soon defeated. With that name it seemed like a consolidation of even more monetary power into the hands of the super wealthy.
How To Always Win At Monopoly Money
A better name was needed to inspire the confidence of the masses. Whether a flash of brilliance or a laborious endeavor, the name The Federal Reserve System emerged. Vegas dice game.
What a great name.
17 Ways To Win At Monopoly Every Single Time
It sounds 'governmental' and implies there are reserves. In fact the Federal Reserve System is no more federal than Federal Express. It is just a name for a collection of private banks.
And, there are no reserves, just a blank check book from which to issue checks for the creation of money out of thin air.
Finally, 'System' made it sound like a solution to all the economic ups and downs the country had experienced since its inception.
Marketing at its finest. 'The rest,' as they say, 'is history.'
So just remember, if you really want to be a big player in the game of Monopoly, all you need to do is follow the lead of the Federal Reserve System.
- Build a cartel of mega players.
- Create money out of nothing.
- Infuse the game with the fiat money and collect interest and taxes.
- Benefit from the inflation.
- Insure the players are so dependent upon you they dare not kick you out of the game.