Monopoly wasn't invented by the Parker Brothers, nor the man they gave it credit for. In 1904, Monopoly was originally called The Landlord's Game, and was invented by a radical woman. Elizabeth Magie's original game had not one, but two sets of rules to choose from.
One was called "Prosperity", where every player won money anytime another gained a property. And the game was won by everyone playing only when the person with the least doubled their resources. A game of collaboration and social good.
The second set of rules was called "Monopoly", where players succeeded by taking properties and rent from those with less luck rolling the dice. The winner was the person who used their power to eliminate everyone else.
Magie's mission was to teach us how different we feel when playing Prosperity vs Monopoly, hoping that it would one day change national policies.
When the Parker Bros adopted the game, they erased the "Prosperity" rules and celebrated "Monopoly".

@MarkHoltom that board is so pretty!

Wonder if the the rules are readily available? Would love to play Prosperity on Monopoly board. Flipping the course in a game that causes so much offence between players when played.

The Landlord's Game

Origins of monopoly, play with collective or competitive goals.

BoardGameGeek
@salakala @MarkHoltom It is pretty, but it’s not the original. It’s from the 1939 Parker Brother's edition.
@MarkHoltom Facinating! Thank you for posting this, I found this gem after reading your toot, https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/the-landlords-game/
What an incredible woman 🤩
The Landlord's Game: Lizzie Magie and Monopoly's Anti-Capitalist Origins (1903)

The story of how a homemade, anti-capitalist game created by a woman becomes a mass-produced uber-capitalist game that profited a man.

The Public Domain Review
@curiouslily @MarkHoltom
That is such an incredible story.
I've always found Monopoly to be a stressful and unpleasant game, but the original version by Elizabeth Magie sounds like fun.

@MarkHoltom Can we make the prosperity part into its own game and become even more popular than the monopoly one?

#wildIdea

@johnnythan @MarkHoltom all the IP should be back in the public domain, so why not?
@johnnythan Only if the rights have expired. Elizabeth Magie cashed out and sold the rights to Parker Brothers. After that it was up to them what they did with it, and as far as I can tell the collaborative rules made for an even more dull game than monopoly is now.

@johnnythan @MarkHoltom
Well, it's not hard to make a better game than Monopoly. Sadly, Monopoly is so common, that it is likely to be picked up by anyone who wants to get into board games and then walk away with the impression that board games are boring.

Also, I'm not a lawyer, but rules can't be copyrighted or patented (and any would have expired anyway), so as long as you use your own artwork you should be okay. So, good luck! 👍

@MarkHoltom Well of course, Parker Bros couldn't challenge their own monopoly on their wares!
@wonka @MarkHoltom It should be noted that Parker Brothers did eventually purchase Magie's rights to the game, and the illustrated version above is, in fact, the Parker Brothers edition of the game. Magie based her game on the economic theories of Henry George, most prominently known for his 1879 treatise, "Progress and Poverty", with the central thesis that land should be made common property via reclamation of its community generated value.
@gcvsa @wonka @MarkHoltom If you see people fight in HOAs about things, land being held in common would be a disaster, lol, except for public lands that are being used for private gain today, which is unacceptable.

@gcvsa @wonka @MarkHoltom Sort of true. Parker Brothers had no interest in the Landlord's Game, but Magie wouldn't sell them Monopoly without it: A condition of the sale of the patent and copyright on Monopoly was that Parker Brothers must also publish and sell at least one production run of the Landlord's Game.

It was a commercial flop though. Mostly because PB didn't do anything to promote it, though perhaps also because it just wasn't as fun a game.

@Qybat @wonka @MarkHoltom It's a bit difficult to cover every point in such a small space. Yes, PB agreeing to actually print a run of TLG was mostly for show, and the competitive rules create tycoons while the cooperative rules create equality. People who want to "win" at the game of life will prefer the former.
@MarkHoltom The real power is controlling the narrative.
The peak of power is not being able to tell others what to do.
It is making them want to do the things you want without you even telling them so.
#postmodern #narrative #theory
@MarkHoltom
Ohh my goodness gracious !!! Seriously!? I want to play prosperity ! But I guess the guys prefer the money grabbing monopoly instead of working with each other… figures 🙄
Thank you for sharing!!! I’m gonna go share this with my family. (I never really played monopoly and it never seemed to appeal to me, I guess I know why now! 😹)
@MarkHoltom damn, talk about victors writing history!
@MarkHoltom Now I'm imagining a tariffs expansion to explain basic economic principles for the capitalists out there.
@MarkHoltom she was a Quaker too I believe.
@mgifford @MarkHoltom being a Quaker would explain her views.
@MarkHoltom More rot created by the patriarchy and their lust for capitalism
The Landlord’s Game - 99% Invisible

From rock-paper-scissors, to tennis, to Mario Kart, every game is a designed system and all games are grounded in the same design principles. One popular game in particular has a mixed reputation with game players and designers alike: Monopoly. Participants circle the board, buy property, build houses, collect money, draw cards and pay money when

99% Invisible
Do NOT Pass GO! | Cautionary Tales

Discrimination has marred the careers of many inventors and shut others out from the innovation economy entirely. Could crediting forgotten figures help address continuing disparities in the patenting of new inventions?

Pushkin Industries
@MarkHoltom And thus, one of the least interesting board games to play was born...
@MarkHoltom
I believe there's an opportunity to clone Monopoly into a new oilgarch game called Tariffs.
@MarkHoltom Probably the most prominent georgist since henry george himself

@MarkHoltom

seems like *both* sets of rules are flawed? Both of them make it seem that it is a zero-sum game and wealth can not be generated, only moved around.

@MarkHoltom Looked her up on Wikipedia. She was also an advocate for the rights of women and black people.

@MarkHoltom

Good researching, but given the country of origin, is it any wonder Monopoly became more popular than Prosperity?

@MarkHoltom great post, thank you!
So the Parker brothers monopolized monopoly? Haha
The Landlord's Game: Lizzie Magie and Monopoly's Anti-Capitalist Origins (1903)

The story of how a homemade, anti-capitalist game created by a woman becomes a mass-produced uber-capitalist game that profited a man.

The Public Domain Review

@MarkHoltom

If you play Monopoly and you are not the winner, you feel out of luck, unfairly treated and sometimes cheated. Apart from the winner, everyone feels worse after playing.

Just like in capitalism in the real world.

@MarkHoltom Oh! That's why Monopoly is sooooooooo boring. Have to try Prosperity rules!
@gdvieira @MarkHoltom Monopoly was expressly designed so that wealth creates wealth - a player who gets an advantage by luck in the early game will become so entrenched that their victory is practically assured. From a game design perspective that's a terrible idea. It's a relic of the original intention of the landlord's game: It's intended to show players just how unfair the game is, just like the real property market.

@MarkHoltom Many decades ago I had a New Year's Eve babysitting job for my neighbors and our tradition was to play the board game called "Life" but play it backwards.

You started out with all of the things/cars/kids/money and whoever lost them all first won the game.

I didn't realize until a few years later what a little nihilist existentialist I actually was as a kid. 🤣

@arisummerland
Okay that actually sounds genuinely fun! Can you share the rules you used?
@Kavus Apologies, it has been almost 40 years since, so I don't know? I would just go ahead and make up your own after reading the actual rules. (If you own that board game, that is.) That's what I would do. I am somebody who made up nonsense scrabble rules and love them much more than regular Scrabble rules.
@arisummerland
Oh I didn't realize it had been that long ago. I do own it, so I'll try to do that, thanks!
@Kavus you have carte blanche to do anything you want with the rules to make the game more fun! I hope you do have fun.
@MarkHoltom
Oh my lord, why hasn't anyone published the Prosperity version?
We should do so as open source...🤔
@MarkHoltom I started reading this and had to start over because I somehow initially assumed this was about the concept of a monopoly
@MarkHoltom My father usually incorporated some what we would now call “hacks”into playing Monopoly with us as children. One was a periodic issue of “bonuses” of $500 bills when someone playing was losing and would be forced out. He had others less dramatic. For him the object was to keep playing the game.
@MarkHoltom I wonder if in her original version of 'Monopoly' the game board ended up getting trashed quite as much as games played on the current board do.
DoomsdaysCW (@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social)

Attached: 1 image ‘The Landlord’s Game’ and Monopoly’s Origins "Monopoly wasn’t invented by the Parker Brothers, nor the man they gave it credit for. In 1904, Monopoly was originally called The Landlord’s Game, and was invented by a radical woman. Elizabeth Magie’s original game had not one, but two sets of rules to choose from. "One was called 'Prosperity', where every player won money anytime another gained a property. And the game was won by everyone playing only when the person with the least doubled their resources. A game of collaboration and social good. "The second set of rules was called 'Monopoly', where players succeeded by taking properties and rent from those with less luck rolling the dice. The winner was the person who used their power to eliminate everyone else. Magie’s mission was to teach us how different we feel when playing Prosperity vs Monopoly, hoping that it would one day change national policies." #Capitalism #Monopoly #Feminist #Socialist #ElizabethMagie #LizMagie #LizzieMagie #TheLandlordsGame https://www.truthorfiction.com/the-landlords-game-and-monopolys-origins/

kolektiva.social
@MarkHoltom do you know if there's availability of this table game nowadays?

@MarkHoltom for those interested in the story, this is a great book on the topic

https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/b0cb0db1-562b-4dc3-a052-23f1d6416306

@MarkHoltom wonder if that is out of copyright and could be reprinted and sold today. Seems like it should be... would just need good copies of all the original graphics.
@ted @MarkHoltom Great would be a downloadable PIY (Print it yourself) or Print'n'Play version under a free license (Creative Commons something) ...
@MarkHoltom so you also watch Heretic recently.
The Sleight Doctor 🃏 (@ApostateEnglishman@mastodon.world)

@Lana@beige.party It's worth noting in this context that Monopoly was based on The Landlord's Game, patented in 1904 by fiction writer and poet, engineer, stage actress and outspoken activist for the feminist movement, Elizabeth Magie. Magie was a fierce abolitionist and proponent of social justice for African-Americans, and her game - based on the teachings of progressive era economist Henry George - was meant to illustrate the negative effects of land monopolies. The original rules were anti-capitalist.

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