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The Soviet version of Monopoly, called Moskva Krepost (Москва, Крепост; Russian for "Moscow, Fortress") used an "electronic model" of a board, and money and paper money, but not dice. There is no indication, however, if any other features were different from the American version. Of course what was a Communist Board Game in the Soviet Union certainly was not a capitalist game like Monopoly but a game of 'idealism'. In 1979 the East German Communist Party used an official version of Monopoly at their First National Committee. The first Polish edition was produced in 1996 and published in Warsaw by the publisher Proszek. It contained 162 playing pieces (zero to hotels, 1 to houses, and 5 to parks) along with one set of four-sided dice. In 1999 a version was made for an exhibition of The Battle of Kursk at the Memorial Museum of the Great Patriotic War in Moscow, featuring the game's scenarios, interactive exhibits, and a vast relief map of the battle, which included marked locations of military equipment and battle specifics. Monopoly in Ukraine was by KVN, published in Kiev. It has a number of differences from the U.S. version. For example, the Ukrainian version has the Soviet state flags on the flag tokens instead of losing their money, and also has a number of pieces with a distinctly Soviet design, with elephants instead of horses. The "Russian Circle" (Русская Организация, Russian Organizatsiya) in Russia published a game for adults which featured setting up a Russian town in a landscape of Stalinist realism, with sites including a Square of Writers, the House of the Communist Youth and other staples of the Soviet Union. The game was limited to 64 players. Monopoly in Spain was published in 1979 by Monte Carlos International (Ministro de Economia) as "Monopoly de Plaza y Castellanos". It contains Spanish versions for streets, railways, hotels, factories, services, ads, parks, and shopping centers. In addition to iron and paper money, there are also plastic coins made to look like the Spanish metallic peseta. It was discontinued in 1990.[52] d2c66b5586