Can You Play Monopoly Online With Bitcoin?


Ever since crypto gambling became a thing, the industry hasn’t stopped innovating when it comes to creating new games and overhauling some of the iconic ones like Monopoly. 

Clearly blockchain technology isn’t just a passing trend, but a seismic shift that introduced a new way of engaging with such games. 

Monopoly is a classic board game that involves buying boardwalks, building hotels, and bankrupting your friends, but the game needs to advance into the digital age, and infusing it with crypto might be the best thing that has ever happened to Monopoly.

Can you imagine playing Monopoly, but instead of worthless money you play with Bitcoin? Sounds exciting right? But does it actually work, and where can you play Monopoly with Bitcoin? Let’s find out.

Where Did It All Started?

Monopoly online is a real thing and it is quite popular. There are many different versions of the Monopoly game that you can play both offline and online, like Monopoly Plus from Ubisoft, or the latest Monopoly Go! Which was released in 2023 and since then got over 150 million downloads across different devices.

These games allow you to play solo against AI or join friends in a private lobby. The game is played the same way as the classic board game. You each start with $1,500 (in-game cash not real), and there are different properties from Atlantic City to London.

But how about Bitcoin? We all know that there are plenty of Bitcoin table games, but what about board games like Monopoly?

Well, this takes the game to a whole different level. We are not talking about Monopoly money anymore, but cryptocurrencies that actually have a real-world value.

So, if the old game is getting boring, maybe you should up the stakes and play with real-world assets.

Crypto’s Role: Not in the Official Game (Yet)

Although there are plenty of different Monopoly games, none of them accept cryptocurrencies. Games like Monopoly Plus might cost you $14.99 for the initial game and you just play it with digital money that has no real-world value. 

On the other hand, games like Monopoly Go! Might have in-app purchases, where you can spend $5 for dice rolls or $50 for premium packs, but you cannot play the game with real money.

This means that all of the current most popular Monopoly games don’t come with blockchain integration, so no BTC bets on Baltic Avenue. Therefore, there still isn’t an official blockchain Monopoly game on the market.

Third-Party Twists

With that said, there are plenty of third-party online casinos or gaming platforms that offer Monopoly-style games with a gambling twist, often under “Live Casino” taps. 

One of such is Monopoly Live, which was a game launched in 2019, and this is actually a hybrid of the classic board game and a money wheel, and you can bet using Bitcoin.

So, how does it actually work? Well, you can bet 0.0001 BTC on a number (1,2,5,10) or a bonus round. If the wheel lands right, you can get 5x to 100x your payout or enter a 3D monopoly board with bigger hauls where you can grab jackpots offering big BTC jackpots.

With that said, this isn’t a real Monopoly game, and none of the crypto variations of the game allow you to use cryptocurrencies like BTC to purchase land and build hotels. The crypto in such games is basically used in mini games that developers added just to make it more fun.

Possibilities of Crypto Monopoly

It is no secret that many game developers and casinos are working on creating a true crypto Monopoly game. There are some rumors about CryptoSpace Monopoly, but nothing has been confirmed yet.

The idea here is to create a game, where you’ll not only play with crypto, but you will be able to own properties in the form of NFTs. So, these properties will actually be yours forever.

Buy NFT properties (0.01 ETH, $28) like “Mars Avenue,” trade with ETH or SOL, and pay “rent” in tokens. A hotel on “Lunar Place” might cost 0.05 ETH ($140), earning 0.02 ETH ($56) when someone lands there. It’s niche—under 10,000 players—but growing, with $1-$5 gas fees per move on Polygon’s Layer-2. 

The idea is actually really good. I think that most crypto fans will be interested in such games.

Blockchain logs every roll and trade, making it provably fair, though it’s clunky setup takes a wallet like MetaMask, and gameplay’s slower than Hasbro’s polish.

Why It’s Hot: Bitcoin’s Appeal

So why chase BTC Monopoly? Speed—casino payouts hit wallets in minutes, not days like bank wires. Anonymity—no KYC hassle, just a crypto address. And ownership—NFT deeds in decentralized versions are yours to flip, some fetching $500 in secondary sales by 2025. 

Players love the stakes; a $10 BTC bet on Monopoly Live can balloon to $1,000, dwarfing fiat’s red tape. It’s not just nostalgia—it’s a gambler’s edge with crypto’s freedom baked in.

Limits and Risks

It’s not all green lights. Official Monopoly skips crypto—Hasbro’s not budging, so BTC stays sidelined there. Casino spins as Monopoly Live leans on luck, not a strategy—purists scoff it’s not “real” Monopoly

Indie DApps lag—slow networks, tiny player pools, and $2-$10 fees per turn sting casuals. Plus, crypto’s wild ride—a 0.01 BTC win ($600 today) could dip to $500 tomorrow—adds risk fiat dodges. You’re betting on tech and markets, not just dice.

So, as of now, there is no real crypto Monopoly game, but who knows, maybe this will change in the future.