Forum
A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
Page 76 of 1419
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Farcus189 (505 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
bobby wobby
the unit placing phase was skipped pleas check thanks
5 replies
Open
ryanwsmith (108 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Bug Report
In game Go Chargers (http://www.phpdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=2973) I (Germany) was unable to place units last fall, even though I've got 14 supply depots and only 13 units... anyone know why this might be?
0 replies
Open
abab (1312 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Bug in support move orders?
I cannot upload the third field of any support move orders in http://www.phpdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=2879.
I submit the filled fields, they stay pink and never turn white, while my browser hangs on. Has anybody else experienced such a problem?
Thanks for your attention.
0 replies
Open
thewonderllama (100 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Tournament Update
It's been a while since anything's been said about the Grand Festive Diplomacy Tournament in the forum, so I thought I'd give an update.

We're in the midst of round 2. We seem to have lost two players to CD and one player only joined one of his games, but otherwise things have been going smoothly. A few of the games seem to be nearing completion, but there are still a few very interesting games going on. If you're interested in checking them out, visit the official tournament page at: http://www.llamanation.org/grandfestivediplomacytournament2007. That will have as up-to-date information on the tournament as I've written anywhere.

If the links tell you you're not a member of the game and don't show you the map, remove the www. from the game url's and they should work, thanks to an interesting quirk of phpdip.

I'll post updates in this thread as games complete and once the players moving on to the finals have been decided.
2 replies
Open
tangchinkit1900 (100 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
I lost the army in the game omgwtfbbqhax
My newly set up army disappears in Munich of game omgwtfbbqhax

Please settle as soon as possible.

My ID is tangchinkit1900

Regards,
Frankie
0 replies
Open
Thucydides (864 D(B))
09 Mar 08 UTC
How do you know if its a winner-take all game?
Is there a way to tell by looking?
0 replies
Open
el_maestro (14722 D(B))
09 Mar 08 UTC
Builds' mouvement Arrows have gone away since upgrading
When replaying game steps (Spring01-Autumn01, Spring02-Autumn02 etc) Builds' mouvement Arrows are missing. Very difficult to figure out what happened during rouns.
0 replies
Open
Thucydides (864 D(B))
09 Mar 08 UTC
New Turn Length
Are the 48-hour turn lengths intentional? I can get used to it I'm just wondering.

In my games everything is running smoothly and I am very appreciative of supporting convoys and no self-displacement. However I am curious as to how the map will replace Game Master tab. Anyway I'm sure that will resolve itself, my main question is about the new turn lengths. I hadn't heard Kestas mention that so I'm curious.
3 replies
Open
amathur2k (100 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Issues with the global tab
+1 on the spain thing.
I cant see anything on the global (earlier gamemaster) tab. data for the latest moves is missing. and oh i just noticed posting has become much nicer with text neatly fitting inside the box and moving to the next line automatically. Thanks !!
1 reply
Open
Thucydides (864 D(B))
09 Mar 08 UTC
Spain
Can I just say, Kestas, THANK YOU for fixing the Spain coast thing. You have no idea how much this is appreciated.
0 replies
Open
el_maestro (14722 D(B))
09 Mar 08 UTC
Why "End of phase" delay got so long ?
Why "End of phase" delay got so long ?
When creating a game, the creator should set the "End of phase" frequency.
0 replies
Open
Sparky McGee (353 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Bug Glitch in Abgemacht
Abgemacht
Autumn 1904, Unit-placing
By my count I should be placing two units, but "The game" is informing me that I have nothing to do this round. We are also in a 40 hour turn, which seems a bit long to me.
4 replies
Open
ryanwsmith (108 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Bug report
In the game go Chargers (http://www.phpdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=2973) Germany has 14 supply centers, and 13 units, but during unit placing it says "You have no orders to enter this turn".... Also, it shows 34 hours left for this phase... anyone know why this might be?
2 replies
Open
el_maestro (14722 D(B))
09 Mar 08 UTC
Following Upgrade of phpdiplomacy all have been Fuck up.
Following Upgrade of phpdiplomacy all have been Fuck up.
All my games i am in are upside down
2 replies
Open
Pandora (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Religion
sean posted asking about everyones political leanings, I was wondering about peoples religion
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Pandora (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
well we don't have a true democarcy anyway. think it's fucked up when more people can vote for person A but person B gets elected. Voting is next to useless, none of them are going to bring about "real" change. and yeah I was pissed it didnt work, so I spit on my ballot and threw it away. I got alot of headshakes, so I told them that anyone they know or could ever meet is going to die. Oh my friend spanish slashed the tires on the trucks that take the ballot boxes. I wanted to go back and tag them but the unwelcomes showed up. lol sorry I always ramble.
Pandora (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I'm sorry but I cant respect someone whose main life goals include "making a ton of money". good luck with that to you, better hope one of us doesnt rob your bank.

And I hate science. I was making a point
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
if someone robbed my bank, I'd be fine. The government insures banks. There's nothing wrong with making money and raising a family. Like I said, I'm not really a greedy person, money is just useful if you want to give your kids a better life than your own, as well as support charities and causes you believe in.
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Pandora- On some level can respect that. Altruism is hard to prove though, no one is greedy, everyone is doing it for someone else
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
that was from not to her
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Personaly I dont agree with her, I think you're a tool. you're just perpetuating the system.
you know what I think is funny about you right wing types? you bitch and whine about the loss of traditional values, but you push for the advancement of technology with all your little hearts. And you can't seem to connect the dots. Enjoy your cookie cutter lifstyle you asshole, you'll die in obscurity, just like the society you've come to love
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Although I wouldn't mind public office, I'm completely fine with my only legacy being more productive members of society.
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I know. I've met you before.
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
?
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
you're all the same dude. if I've met one of you I've met all of you. without an original thought in the bunch of you. Don't you ever want to break the monotony? Break free
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Ah, so now you think all of "us" are the same. That's unfortunate. I think all of "you" are the same. Non-conformism is just another type of conformity. Humans naturally want to be like others. I'd certainly disagree that I'm like "everyone". Its easy to see a group as uniformly the same from the outside looking in.
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I'm not saying you're john jackson and your neighbor in jack johnson. but it's your type of people who have perpetuated the system to it's current point of unsustainibility.
I don't care if I'm conforming to anything, I live each day as a new experience. I make every decision like it's the only one.
it's easy to see a group as uniformly the same from the outside looking in. I'm asking if you really want to be one of "them". beause deep down I odnt think any of them want to be them.
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
There is no "them". You just need a whipping boy.
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I mean, when I think of them I think of all the young, white yuppie who drink starbucks, use Macs, shop at Ikea, and wear Target. They are much more part of the system than I am.
sean (3490 D(B))
06 Mar 08 UTC
Mc Cain thats a huge fallacy to think atheists have no moral code.
Its quite breathtaking coming from someone who doesn't murder/steal/etc because their god told them its wrong while i dont because i KNOW myself its wrong. you have heard of humanism right?
like sicarius i find it odd that you who seem to be a more "traditional" family values guy and believe god's creation (us and this world)is worthy of praise would want to be a corp lawyer and support a system that will i believe ultimately
destroy the family and this planet.
really wish the Christian fundamentalists would wake up and realize that they have being selling their souls to the establishment and Jesus would cry if he saw what had become of his sacrifice.
McCain (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Whoa, whoa, I am not a fundamentalist. I also don't believe the world is worthy of praise. It is fallen and infected by sin. Corporations don't destroy families, irresponsible people destroy families.
Brutorix (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Voltaire - "I have no morals yet I'm a very moral person." Atheism doesn't disregard moral codes as it seems to have been hinted above.

Personally, I place myself under agnostics - I don't feel the need to rule out things that go beyond mortal understanding. I don't follow any specific rules though either.

When it comes to government though it really has little value. Its purpose is solely to protect the people it governs - which in the US and most of the western world it does relatively succesfully. Any meaning you find in life is chosen and done by yourself for yourself.

I do believe that prosperity is an element of happiness though. Not as in the modern consumeristic sense though, I believe that if you have the money for a comfortable life with three meals a day and a roof to sleep under does help people live happier lives - it doesn't guarantee its not the only element to happiness but it does help.

@Sicarius: What makes you think you'll die in less obscurity than McCain? I'm not trying to make this as accusatory as it sounds but the point still stands.
Brutorix (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
damn, there really needs to be a 'edit' button...
figlesquidge (2131 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Church of English agnostic
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I dont, but if I were to die today I would not have any regrets. I live my life to the fullest, and I am completly fullfilled. I said it because McCain seems like the type of person to care about something like that.
Sicarius (673 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Stealing from others is something thats obviously wrong. but in todays society, there is a difference between a petty thief and a robin hood type.
Pandora (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
Nothing compares to the feeling of elation, of burdens being lifted and constraints escaped, that I feel when I walk out of a store with their products in my pockets. In a world where everything already belongs to someone else, where I am expected to sell away my life at work in order to get the money to pay for the minimum I need to survive, where I am surrounded by forces beyond my control or comprehension that obviously are not concerned about my needs or welfare, it is a way to carve out a little piece of the world for myself—to act back upon a world that acts so much upon me.

It is an entirely different sensation than the one I feel when I buy something. When I pay for something, I'm making a trade; I'm offering the money that I bought with my labor, my time, and my creativity for a product or service that the corporation wouldn't share with me under any other circumstances. In a sense, we have a relationship based on violence: we negotiate an exchange not according to our respect or concern for each other, but according to the forces that we can bring to bear on each other. Supermarkets know they can charge me a dollar for bread because I will starve if I do not buy it from them; they know they can't charge me four dollars, because I will go somewhere else. So our interaction revolves around unspoken threats, rather than love, and I am forced to give up something of my own to get anything from them. In a love relationship, conversley, people usually think of themselves as benefitting from giving to others, and vice versa.

Everything changes when I shoplift. I'm no longer negotiating with faceless, inhuman entities that have no concern for my welfare; instead, I'm taking what I need without giving anything up. I no longer feel like I am being forced into an exchange, and I no longer feel as if I have no control over the way the world around me dictates my life. I no longer have to worry about whether the pleasure I receive from the book I purchased was equal to the two hours of labor it cost me to be able to afford it. In these and a thousand other ways, shoplifting makes me feel liberated and empowered. Let's examine what shoplifting has to offer as an alternative way of life.

The shoplifter wins her prize by taking risks, not by exchanging a piece of her life for it. Life for her is not something that must be sold away for seven or eight dollars an hour in return for survival; it is something that is hers because she takes it for herself, because she lays claim to it. In stark contrast to the law-abiding consumer, the means by which she acquires goods is as exciting as the goods themselves; and this means is also, in many ways, more praiseworthy.

Shoplifting is a refusal of the exchange economy. It is a denial that people deserve to eat, live, and die based on how effectively they are able to exchange their labor and capital with others. It is a denial that a monetary value can be ascribed to everything, that having a piece of delicious chocolate in your mouth is worth exactly fifty cents or that an hour of one person's life can really be worth ten dollars more than that of another person. It is a refusal to accept the capitalist system, in which workers have to buy back the products of their own labor at a profit to the owners of capital, who thus get them coming and going.

Shoplifting says NO to all the objectionable features that have come to characterize the modern corporation. It is an expression of discontent with the low wages and lack of benefits that so many exploiting corporations force their employees to suffer in the name of company profits. It is a refusal to pay for low quality products that have been designed to break or wear out soon in order to force consumers to buy more. It is a refusal to fund the environmental damage that so many corporations perpetrate heartlessly in the course of manufacturing their products and building new stores, a refusal to support the corporations that run private, local businesses into bankruptcy, a refusal to accept the murder of animals in the meat and dairy industries and the exploitation of migrant labor in the fruit and vegetable industries. Shoplifting makes a statement against the alienation of the modern consumer. "If we are not able to find or afford any products other than these, that were made a thousand miles from us and about which we can know nothing," it asserts, "then we refuse to pay for these."

The shoplifter attacks the cynical mind control tactics of modern advertising. Today's commercials, billboards, even the floor—layouts and product displays in stores are designed by psychologists to manipulate potential consumers into purchasing products. Corporations carry out extensive advertising campaigns to insinuate their exhortations to consumption into every mind, and even work to make their products into status symbols that people from some walks of society eventually must own in order to be accorded respect. Faced with this kind of manipulation, the law-abiding consumer has two choices: either to come up with the money to purchase these products by selling his life away as a wage laborer, or to go without and possibly invite public ridicule as well as private frustration. The shoplifter creates a third choice of her own: she takes the products she has been conditioned to desire without paying for them, so the corporations themselves must pay for all of their propagandizing and mind control tactics.

Shoplifting is the most effective protest against all these objectionable attributes of modern corporations because it is not merely theoretical—it is practical, it involves action. Verbal protests can be raised to irresponsible business practices without ever having any solid effect, but shoplifting is intrinsically damaging these corporations at the same time as it (however covertly) demonstrates dissatisfaction. It is better than a boycott, because not only does it cost the corporation money rather than just denying it profit, it also means that the shoplifter is still able to obtain the products, which she may need to survive. And in these days when so many corporations are interconnected, and so many multinationals are involved in unacceptable activity, shoplifting is a generalized protest: it is a refusal to put any cash into the economy at all, so that the shoplifter can be sure that none of her cash will ever end up in the hands of the corporations she disapproves of. In addition to that, she will have to work less for them, as well!

But what about the people in the corporations? What about their welfare? First of all, corporations are distinct from traditional private businesses in that they exist as separate financial entities from their owners. So the shoplifter is stealing from a non-human entity, not directly from the pocket of a human being. Second, since so many workers are paid set wages (minimum wage, for example) that depend more on how little the corporation can get away with paying rather than on how much profit it is making, the shoplifter is not really hurting most of the workforce at any given company either. The stockholders, who are almost always far richer than your average thief, are the ones who stand to lose a little if the company suffers significant losses; but realistically, no campaign of shoplifting could be intense enough to force any of the wealthy individuals who actually profit from these companies into poverty. Besides, modern corporations have money set aside for shoplifting losses, because they anticipate them. That's correct—these corporations are aware that there is enough dissatisfaction with them and their capitalist economy that people are going to steal from them remorselessly. In that sense, shoplifters are just playing their role in society, just like C.E.O.s. More significantly, these corporations are cynical enough to go about their business as usual, even though they know this leaves many of their customers (and employees!) ready to steal anything from them that they can. If they are willing to continue doing business in this way even when they are aware how many people it alienates, they should not be surprised that people continue stealing from them.

Shoplifting is more than a way to survive in the cutthroat competition of the "free market" and protest corporate injustices. It is also a different kind of orientation to the world and to life.

The shoplifter makes do with an environment that has been conquered by capitalism and industry, where there is no longer a natural world from which to gather resources and everything has become private property, without accepting it or the absurd way of life it entails. She takes her life into her own hands by applying an ancient method to the problem of modern survival: she lives by urban hunting and gathering. In this way she is able to live much as her distant ancestors did before the world was subjugated by technology, imperialism, and the irrational demands of the "free" market; and she can find the same challenges and rewards in her work, rewards that are lost to the rest of us today. For her, the world is as dangerous and as exciting as it was to prehistoric humanity: every day she is in new situations, confronting new risks, living by her wits in a constantly changing environment. For the law-abiding consumer, it is likely that every day at work is similar to the last one and danger is as sorely lacking in life as meaning and purpose are.

To shoplift is to affirm immediate, bodily desires (such as hunger) over abstract "ethics" and other such ethereal constructs, most of which are left over from a deceased Christianity anyway. Shoplifting divests commodities (and the marketplace in general) of the mythical power they seem to have to control the lives of consumers... when they are seized by force, they show themselves for what they are: merely resources that have been held by force by these corporations at the expense of everyone else. Shoplifting places us back in the physical world, where things are real, where things are nothing more than their physical characteristics (weight, taste, ease of acquisition) and are not invested with superstitious qualities such as "market value" and "profit margin." It forces us to take risks and experience life firsthand again. Perhaps shoplifting alone will not be able to overthrow industrial society or the capitalist system... but in the meantime it is one of the best forms of protest and self-empowerment, and one of the most practical, too!


Darwyn (1601 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
@thewonderllama:

"If one posits the existence of a god or gods able to communicate their presence to human minds, then as an inevitable result of the existence of that god or gods, it would be expected that all humans, or at least the priests who claim communications with the god(s), would have a unanimity of opinion as to how many gods there are."

If god or gods do NOT make their presence known to men (or at least the priests who make that claim who then convince others based on faith) then there would be no religion. Period.

Any priest of any religion either claims to have communicated with their god OR has pointed to some event (the sunrise) as proof of the existence of god or gods.

Therefore all religions are founded on the assumption that god or gods "communicate" their existence whether it be to priests or to others.
sean (3490 D(B))
06 Mar 08 UTC
oh pandora i dont think the world or this site is ready to read that post. i just hope that nobody reads that one post. otherwise expect people to go ballistic on your ass.

please don't shoplift from small stores. you may think the small business owner is misguided but he or she isn't the enemy and deserve better.
feel free to rip of larger corporations but.

ok ballistic posts will follow.who will be first?
thewonderllama (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
@Darwyn: That's not what I claimed. I merely said that the mere fact that a god or gods _can_ communicate with human minds does not mean that the god or gods will choose to do so with all human minds. That's an unfounded leap. Yes, if a god or gods exist, he/she/it/they communicated with a select few individuals, but that is it. No claim is made that a god or gods wish to communicate directly with all people, quite the contrary, at least in Judeo-Christian religions.
Brutorix (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I don't think there will be too many ballistic posts - who reads the 'religion' thread to talk about petty theft?

@Sicarius: I can't really speak for McCain but he may find his money-oriented direction of life just as fulfilling as you find yours. If he feels happy and fulfilled doing as he said above there really shouldn't be any reason to insult him.
Darwyn (1601 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I agree, it's an unfounded leap. Communicating to ALL minds of men is not my argument, however.

It only takes one "priest" to point to the sunrise and say "Sun God". It is then his ability to convince others and the follower's faith that make it so.

Repeat this over and over and over again for thousands of years and religion loses all significance as a construct that even remotely resembles truth.
Davetroll (100 D)
06 Mar 08 UTC
I would have said that comes under the brainwashing argument really.
I have made a personal choice about believing in God, and I would absolutely refuse to accept that I have been 'brainwashed'. My decision was the result of being educated, rather than lack of a choice.
Chaps (and chappesses (yes, I'm a BRIT!)) getting angry in an online forum really isn't a way forward. There really isn't a need for personal jibes here- the object of this thread was to promote discussion and conversation. Hypocritical as this may turn out to be, try toning it down and having _fun_..
Smiles :-) ;-)
thewonderllama (100 D)
07 Mar 08 UTC
Darwyn: It seems like you are switching arguments mid-stream here. Your initial proof, which my comments about communicating to all peoples' minds were in reference too, required that supposition for the proof to hold. I do not disagree that there are a whole lot of religions out there and plenty of them may be absolute bunk.

And yes, religions _do_ make the claim that either through evidence or some form direct communication with a select few, god or the gods communicated his/her/its/their existence to mankind. No one with any sense would argue that.

Now it seems like you're saying that merely because there were a lot of people in the past who made differing claims about the divine, that religion is bunk. I find that to be a weak argument...though I might have what you're saying wrong, so please forgive me if I'm misunderstanding what you're saying.
Locke (1846 D)
07 Mar 08 UTC
haha i'm British too and i'm quite amused by the whole getting angry thing.
I think a discussion like this is difficult because it's hard not to push your beliefs onto others, but i'm quite impressed by some of the arguements pandora is making...although not the whole shoplifting thing! Religion, at the end of the day, is fair enough for those who want to believe and i'm sure it helps them and that must be respected, but for those of us that are unable to have that faith it will always seem like an odd concept.

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208 replies
nelsnelson (100 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Suggestion to Help
hello,
1st time phpDiplomacy player, taking advantage of the great service, provided, thanks.
I am sure things will become clear once we begin, but at the moment I am curious about the time length of the Periods and cannot find that info in the Rules area. May I suggest that it be added?

Sincerely,
Nels
2 replies
Open
Mussolini (125 D)
08 Mar 08 UTC
Public Apology to all players affected by my meta gaming before.
Dear Kestas and all phpDiplomacy players,

I am here to apologise and say sorry to all players affected by my meta gamings before. Sorry for all inconveniences and unpleasure caused.

In order to show my sincere repentance, I will stop playing all the acounts.

I will start a new account, try to avoid playing with my classmates, or play with them in password games,
to enjoy the pleasure brought by this wonderful game with all phpDiplomacy players.

I hope that everyone will forgive me and let me repent, change and start over in this game again.

Hope that you will accept my public apology.

Thank you for all your attentions.

(Forgive me that my English sucks too:))

Jason
13 replies
Open
Troutface (100 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Its the Trouut
Join plz! 75 buy in and lets get the dip goin!
0 replies
Open
happyklim (154 D)
05 Mar 08 UTC
Soothing Ocean Sounds...and silent_hunter...Multi-accounts?
Boludo!!!!2 Spring 1909, Diplomacy
End of phase: in 24 hours
Pot: 74
Players:

Napoleon Bonaparte (18) as England (): 1 units
Last logged in: Tue 11 PM
Monk of Majere (83) as France
Last logged in: Fri 22 Feb
SoothingOceanSounds (85) as Italy (): 11 units
Last logged in: 09:51 PM
happyklim (0) as Germany (): 9 units
Last logged in: 10:13
silent_hunter (84) as Austria (): 12 units
Last logged in: 10:13
timchau (64) as Turkey
Last logged in: Mon 10 PM
pokemon trainer (90) as Russia
Last logged in: Mon 05 AM


And look at their join dates...9th Feb and 10th Feb...and in that game, they never seem to backstab when the situation seems perfect.
Check...
25 replies
Open
sean (3490 D(B))
08 Mar 08 UTC
NEW Players - FEB/MAR
I've noticed a lot of new names in the games recently. Welcome to PhpDip.
how about you guys introduce yourselves and tell us a bit about your dip exp etc.
19 replies
Open
keeper0018 (100 D)
07 Mar 08 UTC
Kestas, please draw game "Megatron"
http://phpdiplomacy.net/board.php?gid=2938&msgmembershipid=16859

The others will post their agreement there. I'm Austria.
4 replies
Open
sean (3490 D(B))
06 Mar 08 UTC
white russia and the map
im sure this has been asked bef0re but why isnt russia white? isnt it white in the board game? it didnt look good? how about a cream/beige?
ive always thought the phpdip board a little too dark. some ligher colours might make it look nicer. and if it was lighter that would allow germany to be black...a much cooler looking colour than brown.
8 replies
Open
positron (1160 D)
09 Mar 08 UTC
Suggestions for Kestas
Countries in CD should defend themselves. Units that can should hold support each other.

In the fall, countries without SCs, that cannot retreat into an open SC, should not be asked to retreat and disband. Too many players don't finalize those steps. The remaining players get to wait 48 hours.
3 replies
Open
Mussolini (125 D)
08 Mar 08 UTC
Replying to people who always accuse, me, timchau, happyklim or other players in my class.
Let me explain to you guys about me and the players in my class first:

I am from Hong Kong, China.

I am in F.3, i.e. grade 9

My classmates playing phpDiplomacy include:

1. myself

2. saradomian

3. Gobbledydook

4. Chairman Mao

5. kn2005

6. timchau

7. happyklim

8. jasperleeabc

9.galaxypheonix

We are in the same class, and gobbledydook introduces this game to me. Soon, many of my classmates join, and we also like playing together. Playing in the the same game is not forbidden.

So I sincerely hope that you guys will stop making up things like we all are meta gaming.

Replying to sean:

Sometimes our classmate dosen't have enough points or don't want to play such low pot games. Also, some of us don't have too much time to play so many games. So, if we want to play private games, we would rather play the game on paper during the lesson... or free time :D

I hope this will answer all the questions to all of us.
7 replies
Open
Chrispminis (916 D)
04 Mar 08 UTC
Babysitter Wanted!
So, I'm going away for five days to Montreal during March break, and I'm looking for someone to take care of my account during the period. I'm only in one game, and it's basically a guaranteed win, so it's very low maintenance.

I'll be gone from March 7th to March 12th. E-mail me at [email protected] if you think you can take this job. Only two requirements, that you be relatively known and trustworthy, and obviously you aren't participating in my one game...

Thanks in advance!

- Chris
34 replies
Open
Gobbledydook (1389 D(B))
08 Mar 08 UTC
End of phase: 25 hours???
GFDT R2 G3 Spring 1911, Diplomacy
End of phase: in 25 hours
Pot: 29
Players:

Gobbledydook (157) as England (): 4 units
figlesquidge (1878) as France (): 11 units
Civil Disorder Italy (100) as Italy
ravendevil (617) as Germany
thewonderllama (283) as Austria (): 17 units
TheMaster (92) as Turkey
Chrispminis (980) as Russia
Enter game
1 reply
Open
kestasjk (95 DMod(P))
08 Mar 08 UTC
Downtime
phpDip had about 2 hours of downtime today, because Dreamhost made a typo in their core router config. The games have been set to have 2 hours more time
0 replies
Open
Pandora (100 D)
07 Mar 08 UTC
Alive in the land of the dead
an essay by sicarius. If you are not interested do not read. simple huh?
35 replies
Open
Iggy24 (151 D)
08 Mar 08 UTC
Join iggster
51 pt game! PLZ JOIN!
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sean (3490 D(B))
27 Feb 08 UTC
bored at work politics thread
Was wondering about the people who play on this site, their politcal leanings. im a good ol` Anarcho-Syndicalist myself.
but from a few mumbles and other hints im guess there is a quite widespread community of right wing nut jobs on this site too;)
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