Below are user reviews of Monopoly Star Wars Edition and on the right are links to professionally written reviews.
The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Monopoly Star Wars Edition.
Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column.
Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.
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User Reviews (1 - 6 of 6)
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Darth Vader takes Park Place....er, Imperial Palace....
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 6 / 6
Date: November 04, 2003
Author: Amazon User
Hasbro Interactive's Star Wars Monopoly is a fully animated interactive PC version of Parker Brothers' 1997 Monopoly board game, albeit with the 20th Anniversary "Star Wars Trilogy Special Edition" twist. Although the rules remain the same as the classic Monopoly game and the goal still is to buy up as many properties as possible and not becoming bankrupt, the setting is no longer Earthbound (as in Atlantic City) but the Star Wars galaxy from the Classic trilogy.
In Star Wars Monopoly, one can either play solo against the computer's artificial intelligence (AI), other human players (the "hot seat" option), or on the Internet through such portals as the MSN Game Zone. (Players who install this game will notice it will later show up on their MSN or Windows Messenger as an additional option.) While it's always more fun to play against other people, the solo player game can be very tough, especially if one chooses to play against several AI opponents set on "Difficult" level.
Although the game does allow for "house rules" (such as getting money for landing on Free Parking), the default setting will set the rules as "set in stone" by Parker Brothers. In a non-house rules game, for instance, no player gets paid for landing on Free Parking or gets extra money for landing on Go, and in all games (house rules and standard), if a player lands on a space, he or she must either buy it or put it up for auction.
What makes Star Wars Monopoly truly fun is the change of setting from Atlantic City to the Star Wars galaxy. While the property colors and values are the same as "traditional" Monopoly, the names of places and currency have changed (from dollars to Galactic Credits). For instance, the highly coveted dark blue color group of the Board Walk and Park Place become Coruscant's Monument Square and the Imperial Palace. Even better, when a player's character lands on a property, a little snippet from a Star Wars film will pop up. Land on, say, Death Star Docking Bay and, voila, Darth Vader steps down from the hold of an Imperial shuttle.
Game play is easy, far easier than setting up the board version. Players choose their characters (instead of a shoe, car, or thimble one can choose a character -- Darth Vader or Luke Skywalker, for instance -- which at first is rendered like a tin game piece), then the Banker (C-3PO, voiced by Anthony Daniels, who also wrote some of his comments) distributes the initial money allowance. Then, with a mouse click, the dice are rolled and play begins. One can play this game for brief periods of time, save it with the File Droid, then resume at a more convenient time, or it can be played in one long marathon, provided there are no power outages. The game is not complicated to play; a single mouse click is all it takes to roll the dice and the computer does all the rest...moving the pieces, handing out the money or taking the payments, and even reading the Rebel and Imperial cards (the Chance and Community Chest cards with a Star Wars twist). Not only is it relatively easy to handle (it is not, however, easy to master), but it is quite fun, too.
The graphics and sound of this game are still excellent, considering the age of this game, which was released in 1997. Despite having been designed in the late 1990s for Windows 95, Star Wars Monopoly still runs well on all Windows versions, including XP. If patches are required, they are available at www.infogrames.com (the entity that handles old Hasbro Interactive software).
Great Graphics and A Fresh Approach
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 4 / 5
Date: December 06, 2002
Author: Amazon User
I've had this game since 1998 and we still play it. It has
Great Graphics including Star Wars movie clips, better on Win 95, but runs on my XP. A Fresh Approach to a classic game is always welcome and this provides just that. Even my three years old loves the graphics. An overall nice addition to any family collection of PC games.
A Star Wars collectors DREAM
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 3 / 5
Date: August 13, 2003
Author: Amazon User
This is a MUST for any Star Wars fan!This is my all-time favorite CD=rom because the graphics are amazing/each character has his/her own personality and there is some really funny stuff in the mix@Instead of the usual Monopoly board each color is a different planet in the galaxy,As if the game wasn't enoug you get a pewter Figurine of the adult Anakin that stands over 3 inches tall AND 1000 credit pieces from 3 planets!!!GO order it NOW!
A must have for all Star Wars Fans & those who like monopoly
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 2 / 3
Date: April 15, 2003
Author: Amazon User
A Must Have for all Star Wars Fans and those who like Monopoly game. I'm looking forward for the updated version or Monopoly Star Wars Episode I, II in PC(CD-ROM) version.
YAWN
2
Rating: 2,
Useful: 2 / 16
Date: April 04, 2002
Author: Amazon User
THIS GAME IS BORING THE ONLY FUN PART IN IT IS THE AUCTIONING.
This Game Stinks Unlike the movies.
2
Rating: 2,
Useful: 1 / 8
Date: December 10, 2002
Author: Amazon User
This game has horrible graphics and cannot get any worse.. It's also slow and boring.
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