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Cash Dome: What's your favorite Economic games?
I like Acquire, Chinatown, Power Grid (every now and then), and Dungeon Lords... although I'm not sure if I'd call that an economic game. Your goal is to get enough money to buy enough monsters and traps to crush some adventurers.
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If you'd like to give something from Winsome a try--and they're pretty hardcore economic games--PM me your mailing address and I'll send you a copy of [the Winsome version] Wabash Cannonball with the 2 expansions. It's just gathering dust here since I landed the glitzy Queen version somewhere along the way. Yea, it's the same Print-n-Play quality that Winsome is [in]famous for, but it will give you a real good taste of that whole realm of economic/train games. I get the impression it's also one of the more accessible Winsome titles.
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GREED and PLANET STEAM are very good, but both a fucking expensive.
Which Greed game are you talking about?
BGG has:
Greed (1982)
Greed (1987)
Greed Inc.
Greed Quest
Greedy Kingdoms
Pure Greed
Greedy Gorillas
Greedy Billionaires
Greedy Greedy
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Monopoly with the Beyond Board walk rules is fun and arguablythe Granddaddy of all economic games.
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Alcazar....The best thing I can say for it is that you can add your own stock certificates and play Big Boss. There are also rules for something called Big Boss 2 in the box. I've yet to see a translation.
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Tai Pan: Deals with the Clavell book of the same name. Trading in 1850's China
and
Noble House: Trading and dealmaking in 1960's Hong Kong. Did a review of it on my blog here.
Both are OOP, but I don't think you'd have too much trouble in getting ahold of them if you were interested.
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- southernman
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Probably my favourite game that has an economic component is the rail game Silverton that has mining and logging as resources to be acquired and then sold on a market system in the game. This market system then adjusts its prices at the end of each turn based on how much resources were sold by the players. It's such a simple but clever system that a spreadsheet aid (to be run on a computer screen beside your table) was created that gives a bit more theme to it (and an old gaming mate of mine has put an online version up as well).
Unfortunately it is a looooong rail game so have only ever got my copy to the table once in 6 years.
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