22 Jan 22 UTC | Spring, 1901: Greetings... |
22 Jan 22 UTC | Spring, 1901: Good luck and have fun! |
22 Jan 22 UTC | Autumn, 1901: Cheers :-) |
24 Jan 22 UTC | Spring, 1906: Well this is fun, isn't it? |
24 Jan 22 UTC | Spring, 1906: Yes it is |
25 Jan 22 UTC | Autumn, 1908: So frustrating having the 6 SC’s needed for the win behind my line and not being able to take them holding the line. Good game! |
25 Jan 22 UTC | Spring, 1909: Yeah I'm well aware of those so just keeping the pressure on you so you can't split off the unit to do that :-) |
25 Jan 22 UTC | Spring, 1909: I treat these games the same as a chessboard... the real fight is for the central 4 squares. On this map, that means Munich. Holding Munich is the difference between attacking or defending. |
26 Jan 22 UTC | GameMaster: Austria voted for a Concede. If everyone (but one) votes concede the game will end and the player _not_ voting Concede will get all the points. Everybody else will get a defeat. |
26 Jan 22 UTC | lol... I guess the writing was on the wall for that. Thanks for the game :-) |
26 Jan 22 UTC | Thanks you! Good game! Very educational. |
26 Jan 22 UTC | Educational? Lol... how so? |
26 Jan 22 UTC | I should have taken more advantage out of taking the close by SC’s before I put all effort in keeping the ranks closed. |
26 Jan 22 UTC | Yeah... you took an early lead by one unit, and I really was worried you'd send someone to pick those centres up so I stayed on constant attack, especially on Munich. I almost made it through the Ionian, but you closed me out. I was vulnerable in one turn when I had to use 2 fleets convoy one army into the British isles and I also have less available centres behind the lines so wanted to grab them early as poss. But by holding the centre, I can shift my emphasis north or south more easily. T'was fun, thanks again. |
26 Jan 22 UTC | Yes! Fun game! Thanks! |