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Rich Dad, Poor Dad- Cashflow 101 Game Graz Club

How Will You Escape The Rat Race?
Battle your way out of the Rat Race by acquiring property, stocks, businesses and precious metals. You're not just playing against each other; you're playing against the housing market, the stock market and even Mother Nature.
CASHFLOW® starts you in a typical 9-to-5 job (that's not the fun part) and takes you on a journey to build up an arsenal of assets that will propel you into the fast track where real wealth is built (the fun part).

How can a game make you wealthy?
What makes CASHFLOW different from other financial resource games? CASHFLOW not only teaches you how to invest and acquire assets but most importantly how you behave within investing scenarios. You can test out strategies for building wealth you might never try in real life. If you're a saver, try aggressive investing. If you're a risk-taker, try slow growth. Win and Learn!

Cashflow 101 is a serious game designed by investor, businessman, and author Robert Kiyosaki to serve as a tool for learning basic financial strategies and accounting principles. The board has two tracks: A "Rat Race" small circle where you only roll one dice to advance, and a "Fast Track" where you roll two dice to advance. In the Rat Race you get paid for passing your Paycheck space, and then draw from one of four decks of cards depending on which space you've landed. Some of the deals are good, others are bad. Your main problem here is a shortage of cash. In the Fast Track your main problem is an excess of cash and finding investments to sink it into before you lose it to lawsuits, divorce or tax audits.
The heart of the game though are the player sheets where players learn how to fill out a financial statement. Players choose from a variety of starting careers (Truck Driver, Mechanic, Lawyer, Airline Pilot, etc.) and fill out their financial sheets appropriately. As they land cards and invest in different deals they dutifully log each change to their financial sheets as well. After a few games most people end up using the same financial sheets to fill out their own personal information.

The board game can only take up to 5-6 players.