The Schedule is a puzzle of 4 parts. The stands, goods and pawns are sturdy cardboard. Everyone has a shopping list and a purse (both paper boards) with coins. You roll the dice and puts the corresponding face value. So you go to the state, which offers the necessary goods, paid and proceeds (or remains the same as when the state offers multiple). Who has bought everything and fastest is back home, has won. Who go out of money in the bank can supply but holen- loses time. As the cube contains only the numbers 2, 3 and 4, all of which are always close together and no one lagging behind so much that he loses the desire. Not super turbulent and exciting, but adequate for small game beginners. The game also does not take very long- about 10 minutes. We have the game away to our three-year-old who buys everything in a shopping aisle in the "real grocery store," what is there (no matter if he needs it or likes) and says with a small handful of coins that's all paid for! He has understood the rules quickly and could also explain new appearance. He also fast a term for quantities developed (both prices, as well as the points on the cube with a view capture). The counting when setting has improved. He learns plan fully vorzugehen- what I need, where you can download the, how do I get on the shortest way to get there. ZZ is for him still the maxim to wasted as much money as possible in order to also have the Bank times ... But that will change quickly if the desire is growing to win. At the moment he is concerned with the games per se. Playful is given that the things of everyday life costs money that you have to cover for the procurement channels that things also can be sold out even where there is something to buy more. You can play only two, but with 3-4 people it's more fun and child learns to wait until it is off. When the children are older, you can still vary or also give each 2 shopping lists. Have we already tried (because he wants to endlessly play "again"), but then it takes too long and our little one loses track and the concentration-3-4 short passages are somehow better. Conclusion: Recommended for Kiga children already quite playable from 3 years, but then must necessarily play an adult.