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New Monopoly game celebrates innovative women — and pays them more than men

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Rich Uncle Pennybags has willed his empire to his niece, Ms. Monopoly, in Hasbro’s latest iteration of it’s iconic board game, where women entrepreneurs and inventors are not only celebrated, they are paid more than men.

“The first game where women make more than men,” reads the bottom of the new Ms. Monopoly game, which for the first time in Monopoly history features a character other than Mr. Monopoly on the cover.

Ms. Monopoly wears a blazer. She holds a coffee. She stands with her hand on her popped hip.

In her world, the experiences of women, and their broad contributions to society, form the basis of the board game.

The banker gives $1,900 in Monopoly Money to female players and $1,5000 to each male, reported USA Today. When players pass go, women again get the upper hand — receiving $240 to the men’s $200. Investments in real estate from the original game have been replaced by investments in innovations made by women, like bulletproof vests, WiFi, chocolate chip cookies and ladies’ modern shapewear.

Along the way, players can pick up tokens, such as a barbell, a glass or a jet plane. The watch token symbolizes that it is “about time for some changes,” Jen Boswinkel, senior director of global brand strategy and marketing for Hasbro Gaming, told USA Today.

The white top hat token is meant to represent Mr. Monopoly passing the hat to his niece.

“With all of the things surrounding female empowerment, it felt right to bring this to Monopoly in a fresh new way,” Boswinkel said. “It’s giving the topic some relevancy to everyone playing it that everybody gets a turn, and this time women get an advantage at the start.”

Ms. Monopoly’s premise is a not-so-subtle nod to the gender imbalances in modern workplaces, including pay inequality, and the ways that women’s experiences and contributions have often been downplayed — or erased altogether — from history’s memory.

The game does two things, Boswinkel told USA Today. It illuminates inventions, innovations and products that families likely use but perhaps don’t know were invented by women. It also provides a fun framework for a nuanced issue that, Hasbro hopes, will prompt discussions about structural discrimination during family game night.

In a statement about the game launch, Hasbro called the pay imbalance “a fun spin” that “creates a world where women have an advantage often enjoyed by men.”

Even still, male players — the game pieces, not the humans manipulating them — can still win, even with the monetary disadvantage. And, Boswinkel told USA Today, families can opt to take the money talk out of Ms. Monopoly by doling out equal amounts of cash, regardless of the player’s gender.

The rollout of Ms. Monopoly, which can be preordered at Walmart starting Sept. 10, comes after the launches of two other recent spinoffs, Monopoly: Socialism and Monopoly for Millennials.

In marketing the game, Hasbro made a short video advertisement documentary featuring three young women inventors talking about gendered stereotypes around technological and scientific achievements. In the short film, the three girls receive $20,580 in real — not Monopoly — money to fund their own innovative projects.

Sophia Wang, 16, of Connecticut, invented a device that is 93 percent accurate in detecting sinkholes before they happen. Ava Canney, also 16 and from Ireland, created a spectrometer that measures artificial dye in candy and soda. In Denver, 13-year-old Gitanjali Rao’s invention involves detecting lead in drinking water in an accessible, portable, inexpensive way.

https://www.nonpareilonline.com/new...cle_9889aeb5-3cfd-54b8-b72e-374e76911014.html
 
5d77cd02a3745.image.jpg

Rich Uncle Pennybags has willed his empire to his niece, Ms. Monopoly, in Hasbro’s latest iteration of it’s iconic board game, where women entrepreneurs and inventors are not only celebrated, they are paid more than men.

“The first game where women make more than men,” reads the bottom of the new Ms. Monopoly game, which for the first time in Monopoly history features a character other than Mr. Monopoly on the cover.

Ms. Monopoly wears a blazer. She holds a coffee. She stands with her hand on her popped hip.

In her world, the experiences of women, and their broad contributions to society, form the basis of the board game.

The banker gives $1,900 in Monopoly Money to female players and $1,5000 to each male, reported USA Today. When players pass go, women again get the upper hand — receiving $240 to the men’s $200. Investments in real estate from the original game have been replaced by investments in innovations made by women, like bulletproof vests, WiFi, chocolate chip cookies and ladies’ modern shapewear.

Along the way, players can pick up tokens, such as a barbell, a glass or a jet plane. The watch token symbolizes that it is “about time for some changes,” Jen Boswinkel, senior director of global brand strategy and marketing for Hasbro Gaming, told USA Today.

The white top hat token is meant to represent Mr. Monopoly passing the hat to his niece.

“With all of the things surrounding female empowerment, it felt right to bring this to Monopoly in a fresh new way,” Boswinkel said. “It’s giving the topic some relevancy to everyone playing it that everybody gets a turn, and this time women get an advantage at the start.”

Ms. Monopoly’s premise is a not-so-subtle nod to the gender imbalances in modern workplaces, including pay inequality, and the ways that women’s experiences and contributions have often been downplayed — or erased altogether — from history’s memory.

The game does two things, Boswinkel told USA Today. It illuminates inventions, innovations and products that families likely use but perhaps don’t know were invented by women. It also provides a fun framework for a nuanced issue that, Hasbro hopes, will prompt discussions about structural discrimination during family game night.

In a statement about the game launch, Hasbro called the pay imbalance “a fun spin” that “creates a world where women have an advantage often enjoyed by men.”

Even still, male players — the game pieces, not the humans manipulating them — can still win, even with the monetary disadvantage. And, Boswinkel told USA Today, families can opt to take the money talk out of Ms. Monopoly by doling out equal amounts of cash, regardless of the player’s gender.

The rollout of Ms. Monopoly, which can be preordered at Walmart starting Sept. 10, comes after the launches of two other recent spinoffs, Monopoly: Socialism and Monopoly for Millennials.

In marketing the game, Hasbro made a short video advertisement documentary featuring three young women inventors talking about gendered stereotypes around technological and scientific achievements. In the short film, the three girls receive $20,580 in real — not Monopoly — money to fund their own innovative projects.

Sophia Wang, 16, of Connecticut, invented a device that is 93 percent accurate in detecting sinkholes before they happen. Ava Canney, also 16 and from Ireland, created a spectrometer that measures artificial dye in candy and soda. In Denver, 13-year-old Gitanjali Rao’s invention involves detecting lead in drinking water in an accessible, portable, inexpensive way.

https://www.nonpareilonline.com/new...cle_9889aeb5-3cfd-54b8-b72e-374e76911014.html
It won't help women win, men will just nuke the board when women get carried away.
 
In before the triggered white males post.
I am a triggered white male, with a daughter. It is "the first-ever game where women make more than men" but as pointed out, "the original game already started with everyone on equal footing, and the man or woman who played their cards right could win the game without any handicaps." But at a more fundamental level, I agree with the criticism that Ms. Monopoly is "implying that women can’t win a game of Monopoly unless they have an unfair advantage." Not what I'm after for her...
 
I am a triggered white male, with a daughter. It is "the first-ever game where women make more than men" but as pointed out, "the original game already started with everyone on equal footing, and the man or woman who played their cards right could win the game without any handicaps." But at a more fundamental level, I agree with the criticism that Ms. Monopoly is "implying that women can’t win a game of Monopoly unless they have an unfair advantage." Not what I'm after for her...

Then don't buy it. I know I'm not going to. I actually agree with a lot of what you said. But I'm also not going to cry about it on the internet. Let the free market handle it.
 
Pretty crazy how commercialized this movement has gotten. I just heard a song from a country album put together by women inspired by the #metoo movement and the underrepresentation of women in country music.
 
Seems fair.

In the new Stratego version. The female soldiers when tapped force you to disclose the location of the flag because they can’t keep their mouth shut.
 
I bet the Socialist version is a blast....leave your piece on GO and collect money whenever someone takes a turn.
 
banker gives $1,900 in Monopoly Money to female players and $1,5000 to each male, reported USA Today. When players pass go, women again get the upper hand — receiving $240 to the men’s $200.

She’s gonna need about 328 trips around Go! to catch up...
 
I bet the Socialist version is a blast....leave your piece on GO and collect money whenever someone takes a turn.
The Bernie/Warren version: The government owns all the property and takes your money wherever you land. Everyone's token is a sickle. The RRs are Public Transit and the corner is go to college free square. Instead of houses and hotels it will be Yurts and affordable public housing. Starbucks is the only privately owned square, one on each side of the board. 100.00/cup if you land there. Pass go and the government collects your guns. In the end inflation eats up everyone's money and there is revolution.
 
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5d77cd02a3745.image.jpg

Rich Uncle Pennybags has willed his empire to his niece, Ms. Monopoly, in Hasbro’s latest iteration of it’s iconic board game, where women entrepreneurs and inventors are not only celebrated, they are paid more than men.

“The first game where women make more than men,” reads the bottom of the new Ms. Monopoly game, which for the first time in Monopoly history features a character other than Mr. Monopoly on the cover.

Ms. Monopoly wears a blazer. She holds a coffee. She stands with her hand on her popped hip.

In her world, the experiences of women, and their broad contributions to society, form the basis of the board game.

The banker gives $1,900 in Monopoly Money to female players and $1,5000 to each male, reported USA Today. When players pass go, women again get the upper hand — receiving $240 to the men’s $200. Investments in real estate from the original game have been replaced by investments in innovations made by women, like bulletproof vests, WiFi, chocolate chip cookies and ladies’ modern shapewear.

Along the way, players can pick up tokens, such as a barbell, a glass or a jet plane. The watch token symbolizes that it is “about time for some changes,” Jen Boswinkel, senior director of global brand strategy and marketing for Hasbro Gaming, told USA Today.

The white top hat token is meant to represent Mr. Monopoly passing the hat to his niece.

“With all of the things surrounding female empowerment, it felt right to bring this to Monopoly in a fresh new way,” Boswinkel said. “It’s giving the topic some relevancy to everyone playing it that everybody gets a turn, and this time women get an advantage at the start.”

Ms. Monopoly’s premise is a not-so-subtle nod to the gender imbalances in modern workplaces, including pay inequality, and the ways that women’s experiences and contributions have often been downplayed — or erased altogether — from history’s memory.

The game does two things, Boswinkel told USA Today. It illuminates inventions, innovations and products that families likely use but perhaps don’t know were invented by women. It also provides a fun framework for a nuanced issue that, Hasbro hopes, will prompt discussions about structural discrimination during family game night.

In a statement about the game launch, Hasbro called the pay imbalance “a fun spin” that “creates a world where women have an advantage often enjoyed by men.”

Even still, male players — the game pieces, not the humans manipulating them — can still win, even with the monetary disadvantage. And, Boswinkel told USA Today, families can opt to take the money talk out of Ms. Monopoly by doling out equal amounts of cash, regardless of the player’s gender.

The rollout of Ms. Monopoly, which can be preordered at Walmart starting Sept. 10, comes after the launches of two other recent spinoffs, Monopoly: Socialism and Monopoly for Millennials.

In marketing the game, Hasbro made a short video advertisement documentary featuring three young women inventors talking about gendered stereotypes around technological and scientific achievements. In the short film, the three girls receive $20,580 in real — not Monopoly — money to fund their own innovative projects.

Sophia Wang, 16, of Connecticut, invented a device that is 93 percent accurate in detecting sinkholes before they happen. Ava Canney, also 16 and from Ireland, created a spectrometer that measures artificial dye in candy and soda. In Denver, 13-year-old Gitanjali Rao’s invention involves detecting lead in drinking water in an accessible, portable, inexpensive way.

https://www.nonpareilonline.com/new...cle_9889aeb5-3cfd-54b8-b72e-374e76911014.html
This has to be a joke right? I don’t understand how this isn’t offensive to the modern woman? The original game had everyone on even ground, presumably what all Americans should want, but this one assumes women want to automatically get a head start? Is Hasbro insinuating they need it? Promise my wife wouldn’t want it, at least I hope she wouldn’t.
 
Why would you want to do that when males, as stated in the article, start with $1,5000?
I noticed that error and decided to change it to what she obviously meant. I also overlooked the Washington Post reporter’s misuse of its/it’s.

Newspaper editing ain’t what it used to be.
 
Serious question - how much do those who don’t identify with a sex get? Seems they excluded a group
 
Then don't buy it. I know I'm not going to. I actually agree with a lot of what you said. But I'm also not going to cry about it on the internet. Let the free market handle it.
I am not crying about it and I didn't bring it up; I am only commenting on a post in which someone else brought it up. I also will not be buying it.

I will be buying up all of these games somI can be declared the winner, plus that Ms Monopoly has got it going on!

That “GO” necklaces seems like an invitation for some heavy petting.
 
Good idea. $400 is the perfect amount for a head start. Makes up for the 2 worthless railroads they always get tricked into buying. “Tell you what. Every time I pass B and O, I’ll make a choo choo sound. Ok, sweetie? Here you go. That’s $200 please.”
 
Great, next it will be Martha Gardens and the winning second place in the beauty pageant Community Chest card will be deemed sexist.

Whoever came up with this is straight Baltic Avenue trash!
 
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