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January 14th, 2007, 12:59 AM
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Sergeant
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Edinburgh, Bonnie Scotland
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Re: RFE: no trading
Quote:
HoneyBadger said:
Outlawing alliances would probably be the most powerful step that could be taken. I don't know how easily you could sniff out cheaters though-and monitoring everyone for cheating isn't really very fun, is it? and like Twan said, it's absurd to expect that particular "law" to be followed well by everyone.
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If someone is going to cheat, there's not a thing you can do to stop them. As Gandalf said, even removing the entire diplomacy/trade system from the game won't prevent someone determined to trade. Even if you blocked that aspect of Dominions, there's nothing to stop them communicating via their personal email address or any number of methods with which they could co-operate.
I don't see the need of a toggle for that reason. If you agree beforehand there's to be no alliances and someone decides to cheat then turning off diplomacy won't prevent it, merely move it to less obvious methods.
I also don't think it should be removed from the game entirely. It should be up to me whether my God is willing to use other pretenders to achieve his goal or not 
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January 14th, 2007, 01:23 AM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Osaka, Japan
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Re: RFE: no trading
Remember, the Nazis and Soviets were "allies" (or at least had a non-aggression pact) once upon a time. They carved up Poland together, and even traded things like oil and weapons (= gems and magic items).
Just goes to show that even so-called "natural enemies" can make temporary bargains.
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"I think that this situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody's part"
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January 14th, 2007, 03:45 AM
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Major General
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Lake of Hali, Aldebaran, OH
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Re: RFE: no trading
I think, in fact, that it is healthy and natural for people to gang up on weaker or stronger opponents. As the Hitler-Stalin example illustrates, this is the sort of thing different religions, even if they completely hate one another by dogma, would do for their own self interest.
The problem I have, so far, is with non-agression pacts. Players of dom3 have read too much game theory, or are too honest, or whatever, and are TOO TRUSTWORTHY.
As yet, I have never had the terms of a NAP betrayed - I've had wars after a NAP expired, but even those are rare. I feel kinda silly complaining about this, but the fact that everyone keeps their word makes non-agression pacts too attractive.
Maybe I just haven't played MP with a diverse enough crowd - but in ferion, for example ( www.ferion.com), people trech (or bend the words of a non-binding treaty) all the time. Of course, ferion has built in, game mechanical, binding treaties - so these agreements are between alliances (i.e. alliance 1 and 2 agree to attack alliance 3 until it is dead, but alliance 2 attacks alliance 1 slightly before alliance 3 is finished off.)
To this end, I think game mechanical support for alliances, NAP etc. might almost be preferable, as players might then feel free to trech on non-binding gentleman's agreements etc. But this opens up an entire diplomatic can of worms that might ruin the (highly attractive) simplicity of dom3 politics, so I think it's probably more trouble than it's worth (coding difficulty aside.)
Anyhoo - if you have a gentleman's agreement to not communicate out of game, and if all in-game messages are suspended, that ought to be sufficient. You'll still get an occasional pre-arranged cheater, but approaching your neighbor and offering a NAP (if it is forbidden to do so) is probably enough of a risk that people wouldn't do it.
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If you read his speech at Rice, all his arguments for going to the moon work equally well as arguments for blowing up the moon, sending cloned dinosaurs into space, or constructing a towering *****-shaped obelisk on Mars. --Randall Munroe
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January 14th, 2007, 04:27 AM
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Major
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Finland
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Re: RFE: no trading
Lying and misinformation in in-game diplomacy is one thing, but breaking an explicitly stated pact is something I don't see myself doing, because reputation as someone who can't be trusted to honor agreements will carry over to other games.
Same goes for cheating in trade, etc. If I was trying to just win one specific game and never play Dom3 again, then treachery and such would certainly come in to play at some point, especially since people tend to expect pacts to be honored.
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Great indebtedness does not make men grateful, but vengeful; and if a little charity is not forgotten, it turns into a gnawing worm.
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January 14th, 2007, 06:16 AM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Bordeaux, France
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Re: RFE: no trading
I was going to suggest making it possible to turn off item/gem sending as well as private messages, and then using anonymous TCP play, to really prevent private communications - allowing "send to all" messages for very limited coordination.
But then I remembered, it's a pretty standard thing in modern cryptography to be able to exchange private information on a public channel without prior agreement on a secret - in other words, the "sent to all" messages could be used to exchange private messages between players (all the other players could do would be to know that some player sent a private message; they wouldn't even know who it was for). So, you'd have to also take out public messages.
Still, a PBEM game with no diplomacy outside of the in-game messages would be fun - that would mean back-and-forth negociations would take two turns, so coordinating things would be a real challenge.
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January 15th, 2007, 11:52 AM
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Major
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Join Date: Sep 2005
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Re: RFE: no trading
PhilD, what you are saying make no sense.
The receiver must have the key for the encryption, so there has to be a prior agrement.
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January 15th, 2007, 12:50 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Ohio
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Re: RFE: no trading
I've also thought the idea of a no-diplomacy game would be a lot of fun. And to the Doctors point I've never seen someone betray a NAP pact, many people make a point that they have never betrayed one and bring it outside of the current Dominions game and tie it directly to themselves or Avatar.
I'll even say that due to a couple of my informal alliances or "gestures of friendship" being betrayed (and destroying my chances of winning a game) I've resorted to formally defined NAP pacts.
I actually dislike the ganging up on a leader approach particularly with the incredibly easy way to discover the leader by looking at the graphs.
While I see Gandalf’s point of disliking the "my strategy can beat yours"... I feel there is a large desire by many people to have exactly that.
Why not create a scenarios where players can test there skill against each other purely with the game mechanics instead of it being decided (mostly) by who took the time to communicate and create diplomatic arrangements with the other players.
The current way games are played is great and it’s a TON of fun! However, there is certainly nothing wrong with alternate forms of play (no diplomacy) or creating scenarios where player skill (strategy and tactics purely within the game) can be objectively tested against others.
Another mode of play that would be fun, eliminates the “don’t get to strong” problem and keeps the social play is to play team games. Break the players into two teams and the first team to eliminate the other wins (shared among all players on the team).
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