The third use for #4 is my personal favorite use of the Deal Breaker. Edit: For that one, if you can complete one of your own full sets as well, it makes the strategy less risky, as you’ll also be closer to winning. There are 5 possible outcomes to the strategy (+2+0, +1+0, +0+0, +1+1, and +0+1). +x1 is you, +x2 is the target player. Edit 2: the Forced Deal strategy is also arguably the safest bet, as if someone has a Just Say No, they’ll probably use it against the Forced Deal, especially if they know the strategy you’re using.
@@BrimleyGames yeah, especially since it’s the only way of getting full sets out of people who rarely complete them until they can make 3 in one turn. I also sometimes use that strategy, though I’m more lenient on it when I have at least 1 Deal Breaker or Just Say No card in my hand. I also occasionally make an exception for rent cards, but only if I can use it in the same turn I complete the full set.
I have a long question about the Deal Breaker card. Let's say I have Park Place(dark blue) and a double Wild property(one wild card with 2 different colors on each side)that has Park place blue on one side and Pennsylvania Avenue green on the other side. On my turn I decide to pair the Wild blue card with Park place to make it a complete set. I then charge everybody rent on my set which is M8 in rent since I own a complete set. Before my turn is finished I suspect my wife is holding a Deal breaker card so I separate the Park place and blue/green Wild property flipping it to the green side up and placing it by itself. By doing this I separate the complete set that I have by making it 2 separate properties, Park place and a green property. Is this legal? Could my wife still play the Dealbreaker card on me? We've argued to no end on this Deal breaker card and the instructions don't specify. Technically by doing this I don't have a complete set.
Great Question!! And one that is debated a lot!! So I would probably say that you could. In the rules it states that you can move property wild cards among sets on your turn. So, technically it would not be a full set. However, there is some debate if as soon as you place your third card that means your turn is over? It’s hard to put a final answer on this, because the rules are not clear about when the turn is officially “over”. So, it could go both ways. Sorry that may not have been the best answer, but I hope it helped a little! The final thing I would suggest would be to maybe make a decision between the two of you as to what the rule will be in the future before you play the next game and that way, whichever way you decide, whoever it benefits, you have a hard tule to follow. Sometimes you have to decide on a house rule to follow. Hope this helps!!
My family counts rearranging a wild as one of your three card moves. So that scenario would be possible if at least one of the two cards were already played the previous turn as separate colors. First move: complete the set. Second move: Rent for 8 Million. Third move: move the wild to its other color, making the set incomplete.
If you Play double rent card is that classified as two actions so you only have one more left, or is that considered to be one action (although two cards are played)
Where can I find the rules for the multicolor wild property card? I see the rules for the regular wild property card that has 2 different property names on it, but nothing for the one with no property name on it.
We have argued endlessly about using a just say no card to cancel another just say no card. Is there an official rule somewhere that i can show my friends that says it can be used that way?
Hey @Ali Hussain! Yes, it does say it explicitly in the rules that you can do that. Here is my Just Say No video and in the video I show the Just Say No section of the rule book with the answer in it: ua-cam.com/video/XsycAE_LOwk/v-deo.html (I hope this helps! Would it be okay if I featured your comment in a video and made a quick video answering this question? Let me know, Thanks!
@@BrimleyGames thank you so much for the reply, I saw the video and took a screenshot, hopefully I'm able to convince my friends with that. We have the Australian edition of the game (the cards have a different look in that) which doesn't mention the rule in the rule book or the card itself, hence the confusion. Thanks once again! PS: yes you can use the comment in your video. 🙂
Ali Hussain That’s awesome!!! Glad I was able to help!! That is so interesting that the cards look so different! I would love to see them sometime!!! And thank you!! I can’t wait to make that video!!
Hi - just wondering, if a person puts a double side property card on the table on its own (lets say red one end, yellow the other end. Also on the table they have two yellow cards down, 2 red cards down but they haven't put the double sided card onto either of those sets (thinking that it then is not seen as a full set and cannot be taken by the opponent. My question is, can I if I have the "steal a complete set" card in my hand can I take the two yellow cards and the single double sided card together and claim it as a full set even though the opponent has laid it down separately?
No you can't that's a way of escaping from the deal breaker move. You'll only have to take those by using forced/sly deals or if the opp is forced to pay you with property cards upon having 0 money cards
Hey! I like your video but a quick question- If a Just Say No is used against the deal breaker, then can the person, who played the deal breaker, take property from someone else?
Hi Sanjita, the answer would be no. The just say no cancels the card and it is discarded. The only way to stop that is with another Just Say No card! Hope this helps! Let me know if you have any other questions! Hope you have a great day!
That depends. My opinion is that you can if you have a property wild card that is 2 colored. For example you have 2 reds and one red-yellow property wild card. You can place them as a group of 2 reds, and place the property wild card as a set of yellows. In my opinion, you can't so that if you have 3 normal red cards. I hope this helps! Please let me know if you have any further questions!
When you give a property card to an opponent, and it completes their set; do they have the option of placing it outside the completed set as a separate property?
That is one of the biggest questions of Monopoly Deal. I know that a lot of people play that way and just have their sets broken apart to never be vulnerable to deal breakers. My personal opinion is that if you for example have 2 oranges and a pink-orange wildcard, you can definitely put it as a pink to have two separate sets. However if you have 3 oranges you need to put them together. I think it breaks the game if you can just never put the properties together and takes away the power of the deal breaker. If you already have a full set of oranges and are given another one, I think then you can start another set. (Just be aware that if you complete this second set of oranges, it will not work towards your goal of 3 property sets to win as they have to be 3 different property sets to win.) Now, the rules of monopoly deal are not the most clear, and so you can play it however you wish. I would just suggest that if you are going to play it that way where you can place it outside your set instead of completing it that you just make sure to discuss that with the people you are playing with and make sure they are on the same page, so it was agreed upon beforehand and is not going to cause a lot of problems within the game.
the Hong Kong version has go to jail (player lose a turn) speeding fine (pay 4m) you inherit (look at players cards) double sly deal (steal 2 cards from player) pay my rent (discard 1 of your card into discard pile) high rise hotel (5m)
Wildcard: So, if you take a set with the deal breaker and it has a wild card in it, that is fantastic!! You can leave it there, or use it for another set in the future. Already have a property: Yes, you can take the set with the deal breaker. The only rule regarding this is that you have to win by having 3 different colored property sets. This means you can't win with 2 red sets and one other set. They all have to be different. So, they don't say it is illegal to have multiple sets of the same color, just that you can't use that as the thing to win. So, my take on it (which sometimes changes as the rules don't specify a lot) is that once you have a full set of a color you can start on another of the same color. (Some people break up on set into a bunch like 3 separate green properties instead of putting them together to avoid the deal breaker. I don't personally agree with that, but just make sure you specify before you play with your opponents.) Hope this helps. Let me know if you have any other questions.
Depends on the rent card. If it is the multicolored rent card, you just take it from one person. If it is a dual colored rent card (Like a Blue-green rent) it is charged to all players. Hope this helps. Let me know if you have any additional questions!
Are we allowed to check ourselves how much money does everyone is having in their cash banks before throwing a rent card?
The third use for #4 is my personal favorite use of the Deal Breaker.
Edit: For that one, if you can complete one of your own full sets as well, it makes the strategy less risky, as you’ll also be closer to winning. There are 5 possible outcomes to the strategy (+2+0, +1+0, +0+0, +1+1, and +0+1). +x1 is you, +x2 is the target player.
Edit 2: the Forced Deal strategy is also arguably the safest bet, as if someone has a Just Say No, they’ll probably use it against the Forced Deal, especially if they know the strategy you’re using.
Yes, Anytime you can use it to make your own set is way safer!! Glad you enjoy that strategy!!
@@BrimleyGames yeah, especially since it’s the only way of getting full sets out of people who rarely complete them until they can make 3 in one turn. I also sometimes use that strategy, though I’m more lenient on it when I have at least 1 Deal Breaker or Just Say No card in my hand. I also occasionally make an exception for rent cards, but only if I can use it in the same turn I complete the full set.
Great video. Can property wild cards be played (placed down) if there are no property cards to put the wild property card on?
Can a multi color wild card be placed alone? Also, can it be stolen using a sly or forced deal?
Can you play a deal breaker card on your opponents turn?
can u split a complete set to avoid the deal breaker? Also does it takes a chance to rearrange ur properties that are already infront of u
Yep. You can split but keep in mind there are many sly deal and forced deal cards which will spoil your whole game easily. So don't split it.
I have a long question about the Deal Breaker card. Let's say I have Park Place(dark blue) and a double Wild property(one wild card with 2 different colors on each side)that has Park place blue on one side and Pennsylvania Avenue green on the other side. On my turn I decide to pair the Wild blue card with Park place to make it a complete set. I then charge everybody rent on my set which is M8 in rent since I own a complete set. Before my turn is finished I suspect my wife is holding a Deal breaker card so I separate the Park place and blue/green Wild property flipping it to the green side up and placing it by itself. By doing this I separate the complete set that I have by making it 2 separate properties, Park place and a green property. Is this legal? Could my wife still play the Dealbreaker card on me? We've argued to no end on this Deal breaker card and the instructions don't specify. Technically by doing this I don't have a complete set.
Great Question!! And one that is debated a lot!! So I would probably say that you could. In the rules it states that you can move property wild cards among sets on your turn. So, technically it would not be a full set. However, there is some debate if as soon as you place your third card that means your turn is over? It’s hard to put a final answer on this, because the rules are not clear about when the turn is officially “over”. So, it could go both ways. Sorry that may not have been the best answer, but I hope it helped a little! The final thing I would suggest would be to maybe make a decision between the two of you as to what the rule will be in the future before you play the next game and that way, whichever way you decide, whoever it benefits, you have a hard tule to follow. Sometimes you have to decide on a house rule to follow. Hope this helps!!
@@BrimleyGames thanks, it helped a bunch. I'm sure more questions will arise LOL
Great!! I’m glad it helped!! And I would love to answer any questions I can about it!! Let me know!
My family counts rearranging a wild as one of your three card moves. So that scenario would be possible if at least one of the two cards were already played the previous turn as separate colors.
First move: complete the set.
Second move: Rent for 8 Million.
Third move: move the wild to its other color, making the set incomplete.
I personally play by the rules that you can’t move cards out of full sets.
If you Play double rent card is that classified as two actions so you only have one more left, or is that considered to be one action (although two cards are played)
Where can I find the rules for the multicolor wild property card? I see the rules for the regular wild property card that has 2 different property names on it, but nothing for the one with no property name on it.
We have argued endlessly about using a just say no card to cancel another just say no card. Is there an official rule somewhere that i can show my friends that says it can be used that way?
Hey @Ali Hussain! Yes, it does say it explicitly in the rules that you can do that. Here is my Just Say No video and in the video I show the Just Say No section of the rule book with the answer in it: ua-cam.com/video/XsycAE_LOwk/v-deo.html
(I hope this helps! Would it be okay if I featured your comment in a video and made a quick video answering this question? Let me know, Thanks!
@@BrimleyGames thank you so much for the reply, I saw the video and took a screenshot, hopefully I'm able to convince my friends with that. We have the Australian edition of the game (the cards have a different look in that) which doesn't mention the rule in the rule book or the card itself, hence the confusion. Thanks once again!
PS: yes you can use the comment in your video. 🙂
Ali Hussain That’s awesome!!! Glad I was able to help!! That is so interesting that the cards look so different! I would love to see them sometime!!! And thank you!! I can’t wait to make that video!!
Help. Can I download monopoly deal on my kindle?
Hi - just wondering, if a person puts a double side property card on the table on its own (lets say red one end, yellow the other end. Also on the table they have two yellow cards down, 2 red cards down but they haven't put the double sided card onto either of those sets (thinking that it then is not seen as a full set and cannot be taken by the opponent. My question is, can I if I have the "steal a complete set" card in my hand can I take the two yellow cards and the single double sided card together and claim it as a full set even though the opponent has laid it down separately?
No you can't that's a way of escaping from the deal breaker move. You'll only have to take those by using forced/sly deals or if the opp is forced to pay you with property cards upon having 0 money cards
But thanks dude I played this at my friends house and I have been begging my dad for this so I’m being prepared play it 😂
That's awesome!! I am glad you enjoyed it!! Hope you can get it soon!!
Hey! I like your video but a quick question- If a Just Say No is used against the deal breaker, then can the person, who played the deal breaker, take property from someone else?
Hi Sanjita, the answer would be no. The just say no cancels the card and it is discarded. The only way to stop that is with another Just Say No card! Hope this helps! Let me know if you have any other questions! Hope you have a great day!
Thanks for watching!! Question of the Day, do you have any questions about the Monopoly Deal Card Game? Comment them down below!!
Can you break your complete set to avoid the deal breaker card?
That depends. My opinion is that you can if you have a property wild card that is 2 colored. For example you have 2 reds and one red-yellow property wild card. You can place them as a group of 2 reds, and place the property wild card as a set of yellows.
In my opinion, you can't so that if you have 3 normal red cards.
I hope this helps! Please let me know if you have any further questions!
1:36 - if you pay the rent with a property, the property becomes money, so I don't think this strategy can actually be used
it doesn't ? otherwise you could never finish whole sets cause all the properties are in the bank or ?
Hello everyone 👋 Do you think monopoly deal USA is better than monopoly deal Hong Kong in terms of gloss and quality?
When you give a property card to an opponent, and it completes their set; do they have the option of placing it outside the completed set as a separate property?
That is one of the biggest questions of Monopoly Deal. I know that a lot of people play that way and just have their sets broken apart to never be vulnerable to deal breakers.
My personal opinion is that if you for example have 2 oranges and a pink-orange wildcard, you can definitely put it as a pink to have two separate sets.
However if you have 3 oranges you need to put them together. I think it breaks the game if you can just never put the properties together and takes away the power of the deal breaker.
If you already have a full set of oranges and are given another one, I think then you can start another set. (Just be aware that if you complete this second set of oranges, it will not work towards your goal of 3 property sets to win as they have to be 3 different property sets to win.)
Now, the rules of monopoly deal are not the most clear, and so you can play it however you wish. I would just suggest that if you are going to play it that way where you can place it outside your set instead of completing it that you just make sure to discuss that with the people you are playing with and make sure they are on the same page, so it was agreed upon beforehand and is not going to cause a lot of problems within the game.
the Hong Kong version has
go to jail (player lose a turn)
speeding fine (pay 4m)
you inherit (look at players cards)
double sly deal (steal 2 cards from player)
pay my rent (discard 1 of your card into discard pile)
high rise hotel (5m)
That is so cool!!! I would love to try that version!!
@@BrimleyGames it's discontinued and quite rare. It's an expansion.
How does the rent have to pay every round?
So in Monopoly Deal, rent only occurs when you play a rent card. It's a little different from normal Monopoly. Hope this helps!
What if you use a deal breaker on a set that you already have one property for? And what if you use a deal breaker on a set with a wildcard in it
Wildcard: So, if you take a set with the deal breaker and it has a wild card in it, that is fantastic!! You can leave it there, or use it for another set in the future.
Already have a property: Yes, you can take the set with the deal breaker. The only rule regarding this is that you have to win by having 3 different colored property sets. This means you can't win with 2 red sets and one other set. They all have to be different. So, they don't say it is illegal to have multiple sets of the same color, just that you can't use that as the thing to win. So, my take on it (which sometimes changes as the rules don't specify a lot) is that once you have a full set of a color you can start on another of the same color. (Some people break up on set into a bunch like 3 separate green properties instead of putting them together to avoid the deal breaker. I don't personally agree with that, but just make sure you specify before you play with your opponents.)
Hope this helps. Let me know if you have any other questions.
Do we have to take rent from all players
Depends on the rent card. If it is the multicolored rent card, you just take it from one person. If it is a dual colored rent card (Like a Blue-green rent) it is charged to all players. Hope this helps. Let me know if you have any additional questions!
1 like one win for the guy on the left 🤣
Hope you get a lot of wins!!!
Wouldn't the game be better if you just eliminated the "deal breaker" card?
W video
Monopoly Dal Hindi tips and tricks give me video please
i hate the deal breaker card, we are always playing it without
Bruh, nobody would put a deal breaker in their bank.
Hey David! Yeah, I agree, it is not the best move in my opinion!