
Wheeler Dealer (1970)
2 - 6 persone
60 - 60 min
0+
Al momento questo prodotto non è disponibile presso nessun venditore.
Nomi alternativi: The 1984 Games of Pacific Palisades, Albuquerque, The Centennial Game of East Peoria, Chesterfieldopoly, Community Chest, The Game of Abbey-opoly, The Game of Barstow, The Game of Bentonville-Bella Vista, The Game of Beverly Hills/Morgan Park, The Game of Broken Arrow, The Game of Cape Coral, The Game of Chelsea, The Game of Clute, The Game of Coachmen, The Game of Darien, The Game of Delhi, The Game of Franklin, The Game of Ft. Pierce, The Game of Gig Harbor, The Game of Grays Harbor, The Game of Greater Jenkintown, The Game of Greenfield, The Game of Harleysville, The Game of Iqaluit, The Game of Lake City, The Game of Lake County, The Game of Macomb, The Game of Marlin, Texas, The Game of McDonough, The Game of Naperville, The Game of New Haven, The Game of Orinda, The Game of Pacifica, The Game of Pleasanton, The Game of Portage, The Game of Portsmouth, The Game of Puyallup, The Game of Reston, The Game of San Luis Obispo, The Game of Santa Catalina Island / City of Avalon, The Game of Saratoga Springs, The Game of Seaford, The Game of Sedona, The Game of Sterling, The Game of the Outer Banks, The Game of Torrance, The Game of Utica, The Game of Warrenton, The Game of Westminster, The Game of Yakima Washington, The Little Rock Game, Plant City Opoly, The Sesquecentennial Game of Dundas, Walla Walla Windfall, Wheeler Dealer
Editori: Michael Glenn Productions, Our Town Trivia, Yakima Jaycees
Descrizione: Wheeler-Dealer is a monopoly-style game (but not Monopoly) that was marketed in local areas and personalized for that area with the names of local businesses and retailers. The game includes a locally personalized Wheeler-Dealer Game Board, 6 playing tokens, 30 property title cards, 50 wheeler-dealer cards, 1 pair of d6, a set of instructions, a calculator card, and over 2.5 mil in play money.
The game does not involve building houses, but investing in a commodity futures exchange. This is the key difference from Monopoly. In the exchange, one invests money for a commodity. Dice is used to determine if profits are made or lost. Other aspects (rent, movement, bonuses for all in a color group) are similar to Monopoly.
Wheeler Dealer is notable for its customized editions. Most of the editions (but not all) were editions themed after small US cities and usually sponsored by the local Rotary Club, Business Association, or other local organization.
Although the components changed over time, Wheeler Dealer editions produced at the same time often had exactly the same cards, rules, paper money, player aids, etc. Only the board would vary. So a card might reference space B2, but the player would have to look at the board to determine if space B2 was Bob's Plumbing in Metropolis or Main Street Deli in Townsville.
The game does not involve building houses, but investing in a commodity futures exchange. This is the key difference from Monopoly. In the exchange, one invests money for a commodity. Dice is used to determine if profits are made or lost. Other aspects (rent, movement, bonuses for all in a color group) are similar to Monopoly.
Wheeler Dealer is notable for its customized editions. Most of the editions (but not all) were editions themed after small US cities and usually sponsored by the local Rotary Club, Business Association, or other local organization.
Although the components changed over time, Wheeler Dealer editions produced at the same time often had exactly the same cards, rules, paper money, player aids, etc. Only the board would vary. So a card might reference space B2, but the player would have to look at the board to determine if space B2 was Bob's Plumbing in Metropolis or Main Street Deli in Townsville.