Which passage from the article best supports the idea that the popular game of Monopoly did not turn out the way Magie intended?

Instead of teaching players about the pitfalls of greed as Magie had hoped, the game she invented was taken for a spin, becoming a race to get filthy rich while driving everyone else around the table into poverty.
Parker Brothers paid Darrow royalties on each sale, and he became a multimillionaire.
According to historians, a man named Charles Darrow sold one of these knockoff versions to Parker Brothers, a big-time game manufacturer, in 1935.
Magie's square game board had nine spaces per side, with corners labeled "Go to Jail" and "Public Park."

"Instead of teaching players about the pitfalls of greed as Magie had hoped, the game she invented was taken for a spin, becoming a race to get filthy rich while driving everyone else around the table into poverty."