Anti-monopoly

Anti-Monopoly is a board game made by San Francisco State University Professor Ralph Anspach, in response to Monopoly. In the original 1974 version the board is "monopolized" at the beginning of the game, and players compete to return the state of the board to a free market system. In a more recent version individual players choose at the beginning of the game to play either by monopolistic or competitive rules. Anspach's game was subject to challenges in the courts. In 1983, after ten years of legal battles, Anspach won a trademark lawsuit in the US Supreme Court. The lawsuit had been brought over the use of the word "Monopoly". A similar game (in that it inverts the objective of Monopoly, but with the aim of giving away money and property) was described/invented by science fiction author, Philip K. Dick.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
666 (number)
uss nassau (cve 16)
morag smith
compromise of 1877
alternative judaism
grayscale
chenango river
west okoboji lake
uss st. george (cve 17)
1920 in france
gppingen g 4
spirit lake (iowa)
spirit lake
uss altamaha (cve 18)
canada gazette
lookout! records
university of venice
uss prince william (cve 19)
924 gilman street
uss barnes (cve 20)
party of the working class's cause
crdit mobilier of america scandal
red cloud
doublemint
bathymetric charts
1920 in germany
norm smith medal
hondo
bowler (cricket)
qif
respect the unity coalition
oak lawn
chill
aami stadium
interactionism
gdansk law
open financial exchange
juicy fruit
i'll never forget what's 'isname
hornsby, new south wales
bumpy
hot topic
mark ricciuto
cutthroat