20 Jan 14 UTC | Spring, 1901: GameMaster: Please remember that negotiations before the game begins are not allowed. |
20 Jan 14 UTC | Spring, 1901: Info: This is a choose your country game. |
23 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1903: That Tunis-move: very smart! Didn't see it coming. The Piemond-move was clever as well, but that one I'd seen :-) |
23 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1903: thanks, this is tough, i'd say you're winning right now though :) |
24 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1904: wow this is really close, could go either way, but leaning towards you winning i'd say |
25 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1905: hmm i think i lost after that turn...nicely played...let's play it out though |
26 Jan 14 UTC | Spring, 1906: nice one |
26 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1906: still doesn't look good for me, i should have done that last turn...nicely played by you too |
26 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1906: lucky guess :) |
27 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1907: congrats |
28 Jan 14 UTC | Autumn, 1907: thanks. Dyou think Austria is just easier to win? Or was it a coincidence that austria won twice? Statistics show that austria wins more often... |
28 Jan 14 UTC | GameMaster: France voted for a Concede. If everyone (but one) votes Concede the game will end and the player _not_ voting Conceede will get all the points. Everybody else will get a defeat. |
28 Jan 14 UTC | France does seem harder...you have to play for position more than units it seems to me. But I had my chances and blew it and you played very well. Great game! |
28 Jan 14 UTC | Absolutely! If you want to play another one (maybe with different powers), do let me know. |
29 Jan 14 UTC | Definitely, I'll set one up at another point...maybe G/I? I haven't tried that variant yet. |