Depending on your edition of the game, there are either eight, ten or twelve. Junior editions may have only six tokens. The current, classic edition has eight.
The game was originally released in 1935 with four colored wooden pawns. Parker Brothers acquired the rights to Monopoly in 1936, and released the 1937 version with eight metal playing pieces:
Two more tokens (the Cannon and Battleship) were added in 1940, after another of Parker Brothers' games, "Conflict," proved to be a commercial flop, raising the total number of pieces to ten. Three of the original pieces (lantern, purse, and rocking horse) were retired in the early 1950s and were replaced with three new designs (the dog, the wheelbarrow, and the horse and rider).
In 1995, Hasbro, which had acquired the rights to the game, added two additional pieces for the release of Monopoly Deluxe, raising the total number of pieces to twelve, but only for versions of the Deluxe Edition.
The twelve deluxe pieces were:
In 2006, one edition of the game, Monopoly Here and Now, got an entirely new look (see related links) to reflect 21st century culture.
Tokens for this set included:
The eight current, classic pieces are:
There are also a number of special editions with Disney, Starwars, Simpsons, Sesame Street, and SpongeBob characters, among others. The Junior editions, such as Sesame Street, typically have only six playing pieces.
The 1935 version had four pawns made of colored wood and shaped like "Sorry" tokens. In 1936, Parker Brothers acquired the rights and released a new edition of Monopoly in 1937 with eight die-cast metal game pieces.
1937
The original 1935 version of Monopoly had four colored wooden tokens shaped like "Sorry" pieces. The familiar die-cast metal pieces were introduced in 1937, after Parker Brothers acquired the rights to the game.
1937
A standard monopoly board comes with 8 pieces. That means up to 8 people can play the game. However, if you buy a delexe edition or a board with a popular theme (Pokemon, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, etc.) then there might be a different number of pieces.
16 chance cards
15 community chest
12 hotels
34 houses
Complete set of title deeds..
40 one dollar
40 five dollar
40 ten dollar
43 twenty dollar
23 fifty dollar
23 one hundred dollar
23 five hundred dollar
the computer
the video cell phone
the in line skate
the phone
the globe
the car
the bicycle
yellow labrador
and 2 dye.
In the board game of Monopoly there are: 16 Chance cards, 16 Community Chest cards, 22 Property cards, 2 Utility cards and 4 Railroad cards. This comes to a total of 60 cards.
Some versions 2-6 and other versions you can have 2-8 players.
currently there are 12 playing pieces, money, hotels, houses, 1 dice, community cards and chance cards and also the game board
There are not many differences between the Disney version and the standard version of Monopoly. The main difference is that the playing pieces are based off of Disney characters.
There are 6 pieces in Monopoly Here and Now
18
Well, its very simple. If you have two pieces then its no surprise that you can have seven people play. NOT no brainer it depends on how many pieces you have
Monopoly has 28 properties in the game. So the answer is 28 properties can be purchased during a game of Monopoly.
There are 32 houses (and 12 hotels) in Monopoly.
2
40
There are 12 red game pieces in a checkers game.
16 on each playing part, 32 totally.
It depends. When translating between prose (or "natural language") and mathematical expression, you need to be very specific about the meaning of your sentence, for someone else to express it correctly as a mathematic expression. Natural language (whether English or any other) allows for a great deal more ambiguity of meaning than symbolic language (whether chemical, mathematic, computer programming, etc). The way you worded this question, I am not sure whether you are studying the game monopoly itself as it is played (see 1 and 2 below) or whether the playing of monopoly is some kind of variable in a broader experimental context (see number 3 below). Here are three possible answers: 1. "Playing the game monopoly" can be a discrete variable if you measure the progress or duration of the game as a discrete number of turns. 2. "Playing the game monopoly" can be a continuous variable if you measure the progress or duration of the game by the passage of time. 3. If "playing the game of monopoly" is an attribute of one person or one class of people in a study, then it might be a simple attribute-- a constant-- and not a variable at all. (the word "playing" is present-progressive, so if there are no other modifiers specifying a period during which "playing monopoly" occurs, then you can assume the action is constant over the entire course of time you are examining.) If it is a variable attribute, then of course the answer depends on whether you are looking at how long Monopoly was being played (continuous variable) or how many times it was played (discrete variable).