dangyc Posted April 17 Share Posted April 17 A lot of players treat Monopoly GO tournaments like a sprint, and that's usually where the trouble starts. You see fresh rewards, flip on auto-roll, and suddenly half your dice are gone with nothing to show for it. I used to do the same thing, especially when I was chasing sticker packs or checking the Monopoly Go stickers store for missing pieces and feeling tempted to push harder in-game. The smarter way to play isn't flashy at all. It's slower, a bit more deliberate, and way better for keeping your dice total alive over more than one event. Use the board instead of fighting it The biggest shift comes when you stop rolling at the same multiplier every turn. That habit drains dice fast. What actually works is watching your position and waiting for the high-value spots. In Monopoly GO, seven is the number that comes up most often with two dice, so when you're around six, seven, or eight spaces away from a railroad, that's the moment to raise the multiplier. Not every lap. Not every time you feel lucky. Just when the board gives you a proper chance. You'll miss sometimes, sure, but over time it feels far less wasteful than smashing x50 or x100 all the way around and hoping for magic. Milestones matter more than the leaderboard Loads of players get pulled into the ranking screen and start playing against people they were never going to beat anyway. That's where a tournament turns expensive. If someone in your group is clearly throwing huge numbers on the board, let them. The better target is the milestone track. Those rewards are guaranteed, and that's a massive difference. Dice, cash, sticker packs, all of it lands in your account the second you hit the threshold. If there's a strong reward sitting a bit higher up, push for that one and stop once you've got it. You don't need first place every time. Most days, steady progress is worth more than a flashy finish. Timing your entry changes everything One thing people don't talk about enough is when to join. If you start the second a tournament opens, you often land in a rough bracket full of players doing the exact same thing. It gets messy fast. Waiting a while can make a real difference. A late entry, even just a few hours after launch, often puts you in a calmer group where the score needed for a decent finish is much lower. You'll notice it pretty quickly. Suddenly top five doesn't look impossible, and you're not forced into burning thousands of dice just to stay relevant for a few extra minutes. Play for longevity, not panic The players who hold onto their dice longest usually aren't the ones rolling the most. They're the ones picking their moments, skipping bad battles, and knowing when enough is enough. That mindset changes the whole feel of tournaments. You stop chasing every shiny rank and start making choices that actually pay off across the week. And if you like having options outside the game as well, plenty of players keep RSVSR on their radar for game currency or item support, which fits naturally with a more planned approach instead of last-second panic spending. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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