After a week of voting, a handful of Canada’s largest and well-known cities are in danger of not even making it on the board in a new version of Monopoly Canada.
Hasbro, the company that makes the game, has opened a public vote to decide which cities will occupy the 22 spaces on the board that were originally named for streets and areas in Atlantic City, N.J. (a la, Boardwalk, Park Place, St. Charles Place, etc.).
With 65 cities in the running for 20 of the spaces, Winnipeg and Edmonton aren’t making the cut, and Toronto is barely hanging on in 20th place.
The final two spaces — the “low-rent” spots occupied by Mediterranean and Baltic avenues in the original game — will be decided by a separate wild-card vote based on nominations of any and all cities in Canada.
People can vote for three cities each day until the vote closes on Feb. 7, 2010. The city that receives the most votes will be placed on the highest rent property traditionally held by Boardwalk.
The wild card vote for the two low-rent spaces will take place from February 8, 2010 until February 21, 2010.
Canadian of the Week thinks that in addition to the great cities that will occupy the spaces on the board, some uniquely named bergs might qualify as game pieces to go along with what’s sure to include a hockey player, a maple leaf and a totem pole:
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Medicine Hat
Red Deer
Wood Buffalo
Whitehorse
Yellowknife
Moose Jaw
White Rock
Here’s a look at the current leading cities and their percentages of the vote, as of midnight Wednesday:
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Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que. 5.4
Calgary 4.7
Chatham-Kent, Ont. 3.7
Quebec City 3.4
Trois-Rivieres, Que. 2.9
St. John’s, N.L. 2,8
Kawartha Lakes, Ont. 2.7
Medicine Hat, Alta. 2.7
Montreal 2.6
Victoria 2.5
Windsor, Ont. 2.4
Shawinigan, Que. 2.3
Kelowna, B.C. 2.3
Sarnia, Ont. 2.3
North Bay, Ont. 2.1
Vancouver 2.1
Ottawa 2.1
Gastineau 2.0
London, Ont. 2.0
Toronto 2.0

