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- MONOPOLY [6.4]
-
- This Monopoly adaptation is designed to be played intuitively and really
- should not require any explanation or rules. Even if you are not
- familiar with the original board game, it will be simple to catch on
- from the program. The computer won't let you break any rules and will
- keep track of all your properties, houses, hotels, rents, and money.
- Two to four players may participate.
-
- During the DiceRoll: pressing F1 will toggle sound on or off.
-
- pressing F2 will allow you to save the game
- you are presently playing to disk or just
- quit the game.
-
- A saved game may be reloaded by pressing F2 during the 'Who are the
- players?' entry section. Or you may include the filename of the
- SavedGame file in the command from the DOS prompt. For example:
-
- A>MONOPOLY JOHNMARY.FRI
-
- If you encounter any logic errors or problems in the program please let
- me know. If you enjoy it, please let me know too. Programmers need
- compliments.
-
- Don Phillip Gibson
- 910 East 11th
- Winfield, KS 67156
-
-
- Though this MS-DOS adaptation is copyrighted, I encourage free distri-
- bution through bulletin boards or by passing a copy along to a friend.
- Please be certain that all eight files: MONOPOLY.COM, MONOGRAF.GRA,
- MONOCODE.CHN, MONOCODE.000, MONOCODE.001, MONOCODE.002, MONOCODE.003,
- and this READ.ME file are grouped together.
-
- You are specifically prohibited from making any charge for this
- Monopoly game or from distributing any modified versions without
- written permission from the author. It must not be distributed by any
- commercial establishment except as a free item. Non-profit users'
- groups are granted permission to assess a handling fee not greater than
- $6 for media, postage, and overhead.
-
- For those who are curious, the source code was developed on a Tandy
- 1000 in TurboPascal. The project was started as an exercise to teach
- me that language. I have high praise for Borland's TurboPascal
- environment. It is a joy to work in. And I also have high praise for
- my Tandy 1000.
-
- The individual files function as follows: MONOPOLY.COM simply loads
- the TurboPascal library and checks that the other six game files are
- present on the logged drive and directory. It then chains to
- MONOCODE.CHN which has the actual game code. The four MONOCODE files
- with numbers as extensions are overlay files. You will occasionally be
- aware of a disk access as they come in and out. The various graphics
- figures were drawn with separate programs and are stored in arrays in
- MONOGRAF.GRA.
-
- Version 3.1 was the first distributed version and appeared on CompuServe
- November 30, 1985. Some minor tinkering resulted in 3.21 - 3.23.
-
- Version 4.0, issued December 12, 1985, added the SoundOff option and
- corrected a rule misinterpretation in the previously distributed 3.x
- versions that led to overcharging when unmortgaging property. 4.1
- appeared a day later when I found two noises in the Community Chest and
- Chance section which were not controlled by SoundOff.
-
- Version 5.0, issued December 18, 1985, added the SaveGame feature. I
- consider it to have a serious flaw that can lead to an impossible game
- end resolution if you are restarting a previously saved game.
-
- Version 5.1 was issued the very next day to correct that flaw. I had
- neglected to save the counters identifying where the next house could
- be built in each color group. There was no version 5.2 distributed.
-
- Version 5.3, dated December 22, 1985, became a little smarter during
- end of game routines when more than two players began the game. When
- just two players remained, the game learned that it didn't need to ask
- who you were selling to or buying from.
-
- Version 5.4 had very little distribution, but learned some new smarts
- in handling color group transactions.
-
- Version 5.5, issued March 3, 1986, got rid of all usage of DarkGray
- against Black in the game. Too many monitors just won't show DarkGray.
- Many people weren't seeing my name, my copyright, or the brief
- instruction line at the bottom of the opening screen! It also added a
- limited quit function.
-
- Version 5.6, issued April 11, 1986, corrected one rarely encountered
- grammatical error, "There are 1 units on ...", when purchasing or
- returning houses or hotels.
-
- Version 5.7, issued June 13, 1986, corrected an earlier failure to
- charge ten times the dice roll for a utility if the other utility is
- owned but mortgaged. A sharp-eyed player in Texas caught that one. It
- also added a net worth report for each player when the game was quit or
- saved before a true winner emerged. And, though Parker Brothers' rules
- are a bit vague, it changed the way play is handled after you roll
- doubles to get out of jail. Many of you had asked that a second turn
- not be allowed then, so that was cut out.
-
- Version 6.0 was issued November 1, 1986. It was a major enough revision
- to deserve a new number. It added two significant new features which
- had been requested by many users, and incorporated a few other changes
- that I felt were appropriate:
-
- -View the board is a new choice on the Doing Business menu, and
- has been The Most Frequently Requested Addition. Apparently a
- lot of you like to have a chance to see who is coming close to
- your property to help in making some property improvement
- decisions. This is a text-screen and thus can use all
- available colors. It gives the players' names by their present
- location, gives a count of houses or hotels on each property,
- and also includes the familiar Property Status display.
-
- -Property now may be traded for payment of rent in those
- situations where you have insufficient cash to pay the landlord
- and the landlord has insufficient cash to buy from you. This
- 'P' option appears on the Doing Business menu only when
- appropriate.
-
- -Audit the accounts is another new choice on the Doing Business
- menu. It gives the same net worth report that has appeared at
- the end of the game since version 5.7. (Mortgaged properties
- are calculated at half their face value for the audit. Be
- aware that Income Tax is figured on the full value of mortaged
- holdings. The government always gets its full share.)
-
- -The blue window appearing when you land on unowned property
- formerly allowed a Go on with game option in addition to
- Purchase, Auction, or do Business first. I found that some of
- my friends were too quick in pressing that G key, and the rules
- are quite specific that if the player does not wish to purchase
- that property it must be offered for auction. I can't imagine
- that someone in the game won't bid at least $1 for any
- property. So the Go on option has disappeared.
-
- -A chance to correct spelling or capitalization errors after
- entry of the player's names has been added.
-
- -The name of a previously SavedGame file may now be specified
- directly from the DOS prompt when starting the game.
-
- Version 6.0a, issued November 8, 1986, changed the MONOPOLY.COM initial
- program slightly so that it became unnecessary to have a statement in
- CONFIG.SYS for FILES=9 or more. This was giving a few people trouble.
-
- Version 6.1, issued December 6, 1986, added a count of houses and
- hotels on the ColorGroup menu used when you buy or return improvements.
- It also put that Go on with game option back on the Blue Window -- did
- I ever hear complaints! And that silly Go Back Three Spaces noise got
- a little classier.
-
- Version 6.2, issued January 27, 1987, changed the phrasing of the
- inquiry when trading Property for rent. It had been a bit confusing;
- you can agree on a value less than, equal to, or greater than the rent
- due. There were also some minor internal changes.
-
- Version 6.3, issued February 24, 1987, made only internal changes of
- which the player is unaware.
-
- Version 6.4, issued April 9, 1987, did some fine tuning of the timing
- when being played with the SoundOff option, and also allowed you to
- begin the game in SoundOff mode by including a /s switch on the DOS
- command line. The /s may precede or follow the name of a SavedGame
- file, if any.
-
- Three special request editions are available from me for a $6 handling
- charge.
-
- -There is an eight-color edition of 5.3 for those of you with
- monitors that do not show the full sixteen colors.
-
- -There is a 'monochrome' edition of 5.4 that attempts to make
- everything more readable when played on most monochrome
- systems. There is tremendous variation in monochrome equipment
- though, and I can't guarantee you can read every screen decently.
- A color-graphics card is still required. As best I can
- determine from some problem reports, the Hercules type monochrome
- graphics cards apparently do not prove compatible with
- TurboPascal's extended graphics procedures.
-
- -There is an edition of 6.2 designed for blind players using
- speech synthesizers connected to their computers. It adds a
- 'Listen to the status' option which gives a "verbal" report of
- the same sort of information usually provided by the 'View the
- board' function.
-
- My personal distribution of Monopoly previously has mostly been limited
- to CompuServe's IBMNEW and TRS80PRO forums plus my hometown's bulletin
- board, 9th & Main. Beginning with version 6.0 I will also provide
- major revisions to GEnie's IBM PC RoundTable.
-
- 9th & Main bulletin board serves as the primary support board for the
- game. It will always have the most recent game version, even if the
- changes are trivial, as well as the TurboPascal source files. You may
- call that board at 316 221-3276, 8N1, 3/12/2400 baud. You'll find it a
- friendly board, easy to get into, with full downloading privileges on
- the first call.
-
- I have been flabbergasted at the response the game has received. There
- have been well over a thousand downloads from CompuServe. The exact
- number becomes obscure as the Data Libraries get rearranged from time
- to time and the counts get reset to zero. Those CompuServe downloads
- have been shared over and over again. The game apparently appears also
- on hundreds of bulletin boards in the United States and is offered on
- information services other than CompuServe. And somehow it is being
- distributed in Eastern Asia and in Europe -- I have no idea how, I've
- just had thank you letters from there.
-
- Many of you have written or called or E-mailed me with your thanks,
- suggestions, and requests. Those communications are very much
- appreciated and keep my ego sufficiently stroked to continue making
- revisions.
-
- dpg April 9, 1987
-