RSVSR How to Score Fast in Cheerful Chase Guide
I'm squeezing in a few Monopoly GO runs before the holiday chaos really hits, and Cheerful Chase is basically begging for it. It's live from 12:00 PM ET on Dec 23 through Dec 25, 2025, so you haven't got ages to mess around, especially if you're also trying to keep up with the Monopoly Go Partners Event at the same time.
What you're really playing for
Yeah, the dice are nice, but let's not pretend that's the only reason people are grinding this banner. There are 62 milestones, and if you somehow push all the way through, the total haul is 18,205 dice rolls plus 3,780 Partner tokens spread across the track. Two days is tight. It's doable, but only if you're rolling with a plan and not just burning dice because you're bored. Most players I know aim for the token chunks first, then decide if the last stretch is worth the cost.
How scoring works without the fluff
The points are simple: land on Tax tiles (Income Tax, Luxury Tax) and Utilities (Electric Company, Water Works). Each hit gives you 4 points, and then your dice multiplier scales it up. That sounds great until you realise you can go ten laps and barely touch a Utility when you need it most. So the real game isn't "roll more," it's "roll smarter," and keep your multiplier for moments where the board odds aren't awful.
A practical rolling routine that saves your stash
What's worked for me in these Tax/Utility events is treating the board like it has "hot zones." The area around GO is one of them. Tax tiles sit relatively close, and you've also got Railroads and Chance nearby, which can still pay off if you miss. I'll cruise on a low multiplier for most of the lap. Then, when I'm roughly 6–8 spaces out from that corner, I'll bump it up. Not every roll lands, obviously. But it stops you from throwing high-multiplier rolls into dead stretches where nothing you need is even reachable.
Knowing when to stop chasing milestone 62
That last milestone looks tempting, and it should, but it can chew through your dice pile fast if your luck goes cold. If you're mainly trying to finish partner builds, the smarter move is often grabbing the easier token milestones, then switching to whatever else gives steadier returns. Keep an eye on how your rolls are trending, and don't be afraid to tap out early if you're sliding backwards. If you want a helpful reference point for partner planning, I've seen players compare notes and milestone pacing over at RSVSR while the event's still running.