Moderator: Community Team
Highest Score: 2437nmhunate wrote:Speak English... It is the language that God wrote the bible in.
aage wrote:Never trust CYOC or pancake.
ClessAlvein wrote:Okay, so I have a continental truce with another guy. I have continent A, he has continent B. I couldn't invade him across the border, so I took a path that took me through continents C and D before I broke his bonus. No problems so far.
I took continent B with my next attack (the same one that went A->C->D->B). Still no problems. His beef, however, was that I fortified my troops from continent A into continent B, now that I took it. I have never attacked continent B through continent A, but I fortified across it. Are fortifications generally considered part of the "truce"?
DavSav wrote: I vote Yes, not because I find it fair to break a promise you gave, you should have at least given him a round or two notice. But I vot yes because I find truces to be unfair in the beginning so if more players break pact maybe we get rid of ingame deals
tahitiwahini wrote:Wow, sort of hard to follow what the final terms of the truce were. For example, was any notification requirement agreed to? It's best to state the terms of the truce when it's finally agreed to. Makes it more understandable.
Given what you said in the OP, I don't think you violated the terms of the truce. A non-agression pact between two players at a border region is generally assumed to be limited to attacks. When as time passed the region was no longer in the control of your partner (but this came about without any attacks from your pact area to his pact area), the treaty effectively was dissolved (i.e., became meaningless). When the fortification took place there was no meaningful treaty in effect.
The problem perhaps could have been avoided with a more clear and less long-term termination condition. The longer a treaty goes on, the more complicated it can become.
I don't think you violated any of the terms of the treaty. In common usage a non-agression pact is limited to attacks, and does not include fortifications. The very fact that you could do the fortification demonstrates how far from the original status quo things had progressed.
Robinette wrote:DavSav wrote:
I vote Yes, not because I find it fair to break a promise you gave, you should have at least given him a round or two notice. But I vot yes because I find truces to be unfair in the beginning so if more players break pact maybe we get rid of ingame deals Very Happy
hey Dav, how about you and me make a pact to take out other players that make in game deals? Wink
Highest Score: 2437nmhunate wrote:Speak English... It is the language that God wrote the bible in.
lduke1990 wrote:I voted that it was fair, but I did so having just read the first post, I somewhat regret it now. If it had been "I will not attack country a from country B" my yes stands, but if I understand correctly, then it seems that you said you wouldn't attack period..., but idk