The first African city
edition of the famous board game Monopoly has been launched and is available in
Lagos.
The Nigerian metropolis is one of the fast-growing
cities in the world.
The board's layout was unveiled at an event in
Lagos City Hall, with the manmade Banana Island named as the upmarket
equivalent of Mayfair in the London edition.
Makoko, the slum on stilts over the city's lagoon, is the cheapest property for sale on the Lagos board.
Nimi Akinkugbe, the head of Bestman Games which is
producing the Lagos edition, told Nigeria's Guardian newspaper ahead of the
launch that suggestions for the Mayfair spot were "a hot topic".
The BBC's Tomi Oladipo in Lagos says Banana Island, which got the coveted position, is an artificially created island where the very wealthy reside.
Some properties on the island sell for about $8m
(£4.9m) - and it would cost about $150,000 a year to rent a flat there, he
says.
The Nigerian Stock Exchange, Murtala Muhammed
International Airport and several hotels are other properties on the board.
Many of the squares are sponsored by banks and
shopping centres and even the Lagos state government appears, while some major
landmarks like Tinubu Square, the New Afrika Shrine nightclub, Third Mainland
Bridge and the National Theatre have been left out, our correspondent says.
Other aspects of the game have been tailored for
Lagos, like the "Go To Jail" cards, which read: "Go to jail. Go
directly to Kirikiri jail," referring to the city's maximum security
prison.
Our reporter says one of the Chance cards issuing a
fine quotes a phrase regularly used by police officers: "Park! Park! For
reckless driving pay a fine... and register for retraining."
Another reads: "For attempting to bribe a law
enforcement agent, pay a fine."
Some of the new traffic laws introduced by the Lagos
state government, and the punishments for various offences, have also been
included in the game, our reporter says.
"You've been caught driving against traffic.
Report for psychiatric evaluation," one card reads.
The Monopoly game was developed in the US,
originally based on streets in Atlantic City. A London version of the game was
produced in 1935.
"Lagos is the first African city to have its
Monopoly. Two countries in Africa have theirs, Morocco and South Africa. But
there's no city that has its own customised edition," Ms Akinkugbe told
the Guardian.

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