Ponzi Scheme cover
2015BGG rank #1,411

Ponzi Scheme

by Jesse Li · Homosapiens Lab

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Players3–5
Time60–90m
ComplexityMedium-Light
Age12+

About the game

What is Ponzi Scheme?

Based on the textbook example of financial scams, "Ponzi Scheme" is the term used to describe the technique Charles Ponzi employed in 1919 to operate one of the most notorious financial frauds in history. The goal of the game is simple: Don't be the first player to go bankrupt! In the game Ponzi Scheme, players are scammers trying to trick investors into funding fraudulent investments with the promise of extremely high returns. You need elaborate trading skills to keep your operation afloat as long as possible, and as time goes on the dividends you need to pay every turn will only pile higher and higher! But when someone declares bankruptcy, the remaining fraudster who forged the biggest shell corporation wins the game! In more detail, on each turn, players must take one new Fund card from the Funding boards along with a corresponding Industry tile and cash as indicated on the card. You need to pay the "promised reward" of each Fund card in a number of rounds. After all players have taken their Fund cards, they may choose to initiate an "inside trade" with one other player in order to buy the Industry you want with a price they can't refuse, or sell your own Industry to them with a good price. At the end of the round, players rotate their Time Wheel 1 or 2 spaces, and pay the "promised reward" to the bank if any Fund card is due. The game continues until at least one player cannot pay the "promised reward" due and goes bankrupt. That player is out of the game, and the remaining player who has the most VP on their Industry wins.

How it plays

Mechanics

LoansSet CollectionTrading

On the shelf

Categories

Economic

Questions players ask

Questions to bring to BoardGameBrain

  • How do setup and the first turn work in Ponzi Scheme?
  • When does scoring happen and what ends the game?
  • How should the table resolve an unusual timing or rules interaction?