10. America
9. Millennium
8. Junior
7. Australia
6. Nintendo
5. USA Greatest Cities
Not only do you get beautiful photography of the greatest destinations in the U.S. of A., but you get trivia and even dice that are red, white, and blue.
There are many editions — here are some of the best.
Not only do you get beautiful photography of the greatest destinations in the U.S. of A., but you get trivia and even dice that are red, white, and blue.
The MONOPOLY for millennials who have never been to Atlantic City, but would look it up on Google before they would ever go there. Each property is one of the hottest websites (ahem, of the early 2000s, at least), and Mr. Monopoly (at his computer, no less) moves around the board and can shut down your site, rendering it "offline" and preventing you from collecting rent.
First of all, the board is round. Secondly, if you go to jail, it makes a door-slamming sound. Third, it has a calculator, so you don't even have to do math. Quite the revolutionary version, no?
We're not going to argue against each Star Wars set having its own merits, but this is the one that started it all, so tribute must be paid. With hotels that're either Millennium Falcons or Star Destroyers, it's a whole lot more fun than your traditional BnB.
If you're tired of playing MONOPOLY like some peasant, there is no more ostentatious way to do it than with the Franklin Mint set. With houses, an actual real estate portfolio, and hotels covered in gold, there's no other set that makes you feel like more of a capitalist than this.