Tuesday, July 9, 2019

The Meaning of LIFETM

Our eight year old, William, really loves playing the Parker Brother’s reality board game, LIFE. I played the game as a kid in the '70's. As the youngest in my family, I never actually won a game of LIFE or any other board game for that matter. Much later, one of my sisters admitted that she and others took liberties with the rules unbeknownst to me. I got used to losing all the time in my youth. In fact, it made me rather resilient. Now, Willy was rolling out the new version of the old game of LIFE.

While the board looks like the one I used to get trounced on all the time, the game play is a little different. In both, you choose to go to college or into business. The academic path in old LIFE lands you a job with the following salary.
  1. Doctor - $20,000
  2. Lawyer - $15,000
  3. Journalist - $10,000
  4. Physicist - $10,000
  5. Teacher - $8,000
  6. Bachelor's Degree - $6000
Apart from how low salaries were in the '70's, I for one didn't know that a journalist and a physicist made the same scratch. That must be because both involve dreaming up nonsense which everyone accepts as fact. Not going to college will get you a career in business with a salary of $5000, less than a teacher and even less than someone with a bachelor's degree. Back then, working for the man in an office with no air conditioning was less lucrative than a manager of a department store who had a degree in Latin.

In new LIFE, the college route gets you this.
  1. Doctor - $100,000
  2. Lawyer - $90,000
  3. Veterinarian - $80,000
  4. Accountant - $70,000
  5. Computer Designer - $50,000
  6. Teacher - $40,000  
One of the lowest paying jobs is a tech career making computers which beats out educators, who end up dues paying members of the Federation of Teachers. The teacher's union mandates that its members may be fired only after "due process," ensuring that even the worst instructors will remain employed as long as they don't kill anyone. No wonder the US ranks 26 overall for education in the industrialized world behind Latvia and the Czech Republic.

New LIFE's nonacademic career path yields these opportunities.
  1. Athlete - $60,000
  2. Entertainer - $50,000
  3. Police Officer - $40,000
  4. Hair Stylist - $30,000
  5. Mechanic - $30,000
  6. Salesperson - $20,000
Today, without a college degree, your best shot is to shoot hoops or keep pushing your mixtape. A career in business still sucks as it did in the past except now it pays more than a physicist, who apparently can't find a job. In old LIFE, going the college route puts you $1500 in the hole. In new LIFE, a college degree lands you $100,000 in the red. That's about right.

College LIFE
My strategy while playing old LIFE always involved getting a college degree, buying a modest house, and saving as much money as possible. Even though it never worked when playing the game, that's what I did in real life which so far has turned out pretty good. In new LIFE, the blue squares represent lawsuits against other players. In old LIFE, the blue squares all involved playing the stock market. Apparently, you get ahead in new LIFE by suing your neighbor.

Blue Spaces
There are nine "Spin to Win" board spaces in new LIFE. Landing on one of these spaces allows you to bet on the next number spun on the wheel. If your number comes in you get ten times the amount you wager. In old LIFE, you bet on the wheel every time your opponent spins. So the way to win in old LIFE is to gamble. I never knew that. The regular spaces in both games are different as well. For example, in old LIFE there is a space that indicates,

"Lost in the Jungle! Pay $30,000"

While in new LIFE, we have,

"Snowboarding accident! Pay $5000"

Shelling out thousands in ransom to a local warlord in a third world country was a likely scenario back in the '70's as is a snowboarding accident costing thousands today with all the crap healthcare plans we have. Old LIFE has,

"Eccentric Aunt leaves you with 100 cats! Pay $10,000 to give them away."

Alternately, new LIFE has two squares indicating that you "adopt a pet from a shelter." I never knew anybody who spent thousands of dollars to get rid of a bunch of cats. Back when I was young, my neighbor, Old Man Perry, was fed up with a cat that kept sneaking into his garage. Mr. Perry exclaimed,

"That cat's pissing all over the place!"

One day, he caught the cat in the garage so he shut the door, started up his car, then went to get a cup of coffee. I asked Mr. Perry what happened to the cat. He said,

"I threw it in the trash."

That's how we got it done in the '70's.

In old LIFE, if you land directly on a "Pay Day" you had to "Share the Wealth," that is, you draw a card that instructs you to collect half the amount an opponent is entitled to or require someone else to pay half your bill. Your opponent might have an "Exemption Card" which counters your claim. In new LIFE, the "Share the Wealth" card may be played against another player who then must pay half your debt to the bank. In old LIFE, sharing the wealth meant others pay for you. In new LIFE, it means others pay the bank for you because as everyone knows, the banks have us all by the balls.

Unique to old LIFE, is the "Green Revenge Space," which allows you to enact revenge against another player to the tune of $100,000. Alternately, you can send them back ten spaces. The instructions expressly state that you cannot exact revenge on someone in "Millionaire Acres." Of course you can't. With wealth comes power and privilege like spending $450,000 so your kid can get accepted into a geology program in college on a phony athletic scholarship just to wash out in a semester.

Revenge!
Oddly, just south of the green pictured revenge space is,

"Catch a whale, skin diving. Collect $5000"

I'm pretty sure this was not something anyone did with any measure of success in the 1970's. Whale watching was just starting to be a thing back then. I never heard of anyone pawning a whale for $5000. I always thought the old version should've had,

"Draw low draft number. Move ahead three spaces."

Or perhaps,

"Busted for possession of pot. Move back five spaces."

In the new version, we should have,

"Robot takes your job. Take new career card."

Or maybe,

 "Earn useless anthropology degree. Pay all your money."

The biggest difference in the old versus and the new version of LIFE is at the end. In old LIFE when you reach the "Day of Reckoning," you cash out, receiving $20,000 (a doctor's salary) for each kid you have. You either go to "Millionaire Acres" if you think you have enough wealth to win the game, or you bet all your coin on a one in ten chance at the spin of the wheel to become a "Millionaire Tycoon." If your number doesn't come in, you go to the "Poor Farm."

In new LIFE, when you reach the "Retirement" square, you choose to go to "Millionaire Estates" or "Countryside Acres," both of which sound very nice to me. There's no poor farm because that isn't a safe space. You get $10,000 per kid (10% of a doctor's salary), much less than in old LIFE. Apparently, having children has significantly depreciated. During the game, you collect "Life Tiles" when you land on an appropriate square. When the pile of tiles are exhausted, the remaining players who are awarded a Life Tile take them from people in Millionaire Estates but not in Countryside Acres. That's because the people in Millionaire Estates have to pay their fair share. In both versions, the player with the most money at the end wins.

Life is sometimes difficult, often wondrous, and occasionally exhilarating, but one thing is for sure. It's far less complicated than the Game of LIFE.

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