AT& T is finally giving up its Monopoly game and started to offer an unlimited plan to its consumers. But it turns out to be still on a top expensive plan in the country. Now, the company tweaks the primary data plan with a lower price, the new plan will start on March 2, Thursday.

After AT&T offered a new unlimited plan deal called "Unlimited Plus" to counter act the Verizon's latest plans, other sites swiftly point out that the company's deal was a bad move. In the said new plans, it reportedly cost $90 for a single line but with full access to a 10GB LTE tethering data and high-definition videos.

For the Unlimited Plus, $145 for two phones that include paperless billing, auto-pay with another $20 for the additional line for each. It manually removes the "Stream Saver" option and consumers will only see full HF videos and the 10GB tethered data automatically drops off to 128Kbps once hit the limit.

AT&T's Unlimited Plans still has a sweeter side, consumers who use the plan gets a $25 off their DirecTV NOW bill after two cycles of payment. Bringing the plan down to $65 for one line if consumers have DirecTV, Android Police has reported.

But still, AT&T's Unlimited Plus is still on number 1 spot of most expensive plans compared to other companies. After dusting off, the company tweaks the primary data plan with much lower price with the inclusion of tethered data and cheaper options for good measure.

AT&T's come up with another option, the "Unlimited Choice." The plan starts at $60 a month, includes auto-pay, and has a permanently speed up to 3Mbps. Fast enough to do basic things on the internet like browsing, streaming music.

Engadget reports, with the Unlimited Choice, when streaming videos obviously have poor quality. The Multi-line plans will start at $115 for every two phones and another $20 for the additional phone. With this plan, the DirecTV discounts are not available.

With this kind of offer from the company, consumers will probably be choosing Verizon that offer $80 unlimited plan and other companies that offers cheap. But the AT&T's DirecTV bill credits might be winning the customers.