In http://www.phpdiplomacy.net/board.php?gid=2754
I found that a 3 man band appearing in another game reappeared....and apparently, they are close friends that makes moves a one or even a meta gamer.......in the game, france had deliberately left portugal untaken, and if u check the logs, there is no conflict.....
I have played these guys (yeunghauyip, wing09, roger1994...) before and the same happened, they play with a game-long alliance, and even when empty scs are around, they never invade into each other's country
even worse, yeunghauyip claimed to me in the opening of the other game that they "know" each other well and he even has the password for wing09's account........
plz, either ban them, or would they come up and deny the charges.....
admins plz keep an eye on them.....
I personally don't have an issue with metagaming unless the players who know each other are actually seeing each other's moves. Surely this is the same as multi accounting as players know exactly what they are doing, and have a 100% trust.
If players know each other and ally, then surely this is just as good an alliance as one that can be formed online- If you didn't know that they lived together, and that they knew each other, then you wouldn't be complaining.
So it would simply appear that people who complain about metagaming are simply complaining that they aren't having a fair bite at the apple. Surely you have the same opportunity as anyone else to create an alliance. Better still, turning two friends on each other- this shows the highest diplomatic ability of all in my opinion.
To summarise, try viewing meta-gaming as a challenge to overcome the odds, and prove yourself on the stage of Europe :-)
I quote from a 2004 Washington Post article about diplomacy called "World Domination: the Game"
Of a best-backstabber award that a ftf diplomacy society awards annually:
"the person who pulls off the weekend's best back-stab will receive the Golden Blade. "It's a good award to have, but you win too many of them and people start to wonder about you," Satan says."
Of one of the players in the tournament this article centers on:
"Hood, who is Turkey, first sounds out his immediate neighbors on the board -- Italy, Austria and Russia -- and tries to put them at ease. The Diplomacy circuit has its own balance of power, and Hood's national reputation and trophy collection make him a prime target for a preemptive attack."
So... this is metagaming. Should these players, who I might add are probably several times better than any of us, be reprimanded for their obvious "metagaming?" I actually argue that "metagaming" should not even be discouraged, it is simply part of the game of diplomacy, and a fun game at that.
The article is at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A38110-2004Nov9_2.html
shad, that may be the case for you, and for me, and for most well-rounded diplomacy players on this site. But we have had loads of examples of friends, classmates and family members who sign up to the same games, always ally, and never stab each other (at least not until they are the only ones left). If they are playing from the same computer lab, it's a good bet they're at screens next to each other while they're inputting their moves, and chatting to each other.
Like you say, it would be fine if they treated their mates exactly the same as any other player. But human nature and our experience here says they very rarely do!
And it's "using any factors outside the current game to inform your strategy with regard to a particular player" if you want to be picky! Information and attitudes you use indiscriminately do not come under metagaming because they do not give any one player a specific advantage or disadvantage.
I don't know really- I work a lot with Yeunghauyip etc, and we've had very good past cooperation between both of us. I tend to remember good teamwork and if a player is a reliable ally in sticky situations then I tend to approach him in games.
For example, in the game Political Puppets 2, Austria and Italy were CD, and we both happened to join late. We overwhelmed Turkey, then Russia, and then turned on France to achieve a 3- way draw at 17-10-7. Great teamwork and calculating- so I like working with him.
Meta gaming? With him I reckon he's a very staunch ally that's all.
As for Roger19... I don't know much about him. He's very cooperative though, and quite talkative to me