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Stock #1903 |
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Suggested Retail
Price $14.99 |
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Bernie DeKoven
Deep Fun
June 2003
USA
Did you know that the stock trading game PIT was originally
called Gavitt's Stock Exchange invented in Topeka, Kansas
in 1903? Did you know that the original game was at least
as fun as PIT and even simpler to play? Well, neither did
I. But apparently someone did. Someone in halfway around the
world. In Australia, no less, who saw in the game such high
play value that he decided to reproduce it as faithfully as
possible - well, more faithfully than possible, given that
the cards are laminated thoroughly enough to take the kind
of punishment that is the inevitable destiny of such a highly
interactive, exciting, fast-action game.
This is the game where you try to trade cards (stocks) with
other players - either one or two cards at a time - in the
effort to corner the market and get all eight cards of one
stock. Everybody trades simultaneously, and with enough people
it really feels like your playing in the pit of a stock exchange.
Though Gavitt's Stock Exchange can be played by two to six
players, it's definitely a case of the more the merrier. We
tried it with two, and it was kind of fun. And then with three,
and it was more the kind of fun you'd call fun. But with with
six it borders on pants-wetting fun. Especially if you more
or less tacitly allow cheating.
There's something about playing with turn-of-the-century-looking
cards that makes the game as charming to look at as it is
fun to play. Fun enough to get a Major FUN Award. The rules
are a little difficult to read because of the authentically
small print. They are quaint, but unnecessarily complicated.
Read enough to get started, and then get started. After a
while, you can read more of the rules, for fun and authenticity.
Return to Gavitt's
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