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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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trip (696 D(B))
16 Apr 12 UTC
Gunboat 101
Looking for six players to join a pasworded WTA 101pt gunboat. Anyone? Anyone?
17 replies
Open
mattsh (775 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
Delay of game
Dear admins,

We've been waiting in a web dip game for about two weeks now. Can you please force an un-pause from Europe and Argentina? Thanks!
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=76087
4 replies
Open
cteno4 (100 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
Original 1958 Diplomacy is a trip.
Have any of you played on that map? It looks CRAZY. You can only build in one or two places. It allows for more than one unit to occupy the same space, and there are all those crazy extra provinces! WOW.
22 replies
Open
czarm (100 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
be quick: a game starts in 5 min
Need 4 players extra!!!
1 reply
Open
czarm (100 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
be quick: a game starts in 5 min
look for the game: quick game 1; starts in 5 min
be quick and ready .... for good war!
0 replies
Open
Leonidas (635 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
Ghost Rating
What kind of affect does joining existing games have on your GR?
23 replies
Open
Sargmacher (0 DX)
13 Apr 12 UTC
1109 Point Gunboat
WTA, 25 hour, gunboat.

41 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
15 Apr 12 UTC
Titanic ...... are you mourning today?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-17715345
Are we just becoming professional mourners ........ how much time and thought will you spare today thinking about people who died on a boat in 1912?
23 replies
Open
NakedBatman (545 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Bug? can't convoy...
I'm in a world dip game and trying a multi-fleet convoy but one of the fleets isn't working.
7 replies
Open
King Atom (100 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Saucy Apples
I like Apple Sauce, but I don't like Apples. I like Apple Juice, but I don't like Apple Pie.

Discuss.
10 replies
Open
patizcool (100 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Destroyed units of CD nations
I'm sure this has been answered before, but I'm not quite sure where. If a country is in CD, what is the order of the his units that are destroyed? I believe I saw somewhere it was the farthest away in a non-SC position first, is that correct?
7 replies
Open
Praed (100 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
Sitter wanted for Gunboat
1 day phase, Spring 04, good position.
Please PM if interested. Thank you.
1 reply
Open
thatwasawkward (4690 D(B))
15 Apr 12 UTC
EOG: Gunboat Challenge Game 14
gameID=85009
I ACCIDENTALLY HIT "DRAW" WHILE ENTERING MOVES. Awesome.
Good game all. I realize the tide was turning against me, but there was still a lot of fighting to be done. Sad face.
17 replies
Open
therhat (104 D)
16 Apr 12 UTC
I am not trolling!!!
YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU YOU

Your so lazy you didn't read all of the "YOU"s above.
5 replies
Open
gwalchmai (331 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Empire-6 come and join new game
a new game with one day turnover. Come and join. the password to enter is thequeen
1 reply
Open
ajb (846 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Italy Attack
Anyone have games where italy immediately went after France and did well or won?
17 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Oh, Cry Me A River (And then Have Jesus Walk On It Already...)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/14/christians-persecuted-archbishop-canterbury-carey Yeah, no, sorry--you don't get to pull the "Stop picking on me!" card when you're the dominant view in the West, have a billion-plus followers, and, oh yes, have kicked and killed and demonized and persecuted countless millions of Jews and Muslims and Atheists anyone ELSE who dared disagree with your opinion over the last 2000 years.
60 replies
Open
Diplomat33 (243 D(B))
15 Apr 12 UTC
King Atom was a multi!
Why did I just figure this out?
4 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Favorite (Short) Poems? (And Perhaps We Can Put A Few Of Our Own?)
I think we did this a while back, where we posted different things we'd written...and I've definitely had a "Top ___ Works Ever" thread (or two or four or four thousand) before...
So here they are combined--favorite short poems (ie, no Iliad/Paradise Lost/The Waste Land, good as they are, they're longer poems and in another category) and, for the brave...perhaps we can get a Poetry Corner going? :)
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
I post this for three reasons, right now:

1. I like the topic (obviously) and we haven't had a good literary discussion in a while, sharing our favorites and all...plus, given how spread across the map (especially in the Americas and Europe) we are, I'd be interested what some outside the US and possibly UK might consider great work...perhaps Keats and Eliot and Poe aren't so beloved in the Balkans, Almighty Balkan World Cup Team? ;)

2. I'm transferring in a few short weeks (finally!) so I'm really thinking and choosing between time periods and authors, now, to study in-depth my first semester...

3. I said I'd try and get something published before I left my community college, and I've made good on that promise to myself--I submitted a short poem to a poetry magazine...and while I don't expect it at all to get accepted, as this is a REAL literary magazine, even still, at least I can say I tried, and will keep trying...and if I get rejected, hey, I can still say I was rejected by the same magazine that accepted T.S. Eliot's poetry, so at least there's that, and it should be easier and less of a racking experience next time I try... :)

So, favorite short poems?
Vaftrudner (2533 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
1. There is unfortunately a language barrier here. I know a lot of great Swedish poetry, but I don't know if any of it is translated (well). I can try to look up some stuff, but translating poetry is the most difficult translation work, if at all possible. I write poetry as well, and I managed to get a book published, a cooperation with an artist I know, half poems and half drawings. I've tried to translate my own work but it doesn't work. It relies too much on Swedish.

In English poems, I always return to The Second Coming. It's become like a refrain for me, and lines from it pop up in my head at the oddest of times. The same with Howl and America by Ginsberg, but those aren't short in any way ;)

Good luck with your own writing! I hope you don't get your heart ripped out and stomped on, but that seems to be mandatory.
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Anyway, my Top 5 favorite short poems:

-"She Walks In Beauty" by Lord Byron

It's just such a perfect and potent poem...I really don't even know how else to describe it without going on and on about it, but just those opening lines alone...

-"Sonnet 30" by William Shakespeare

Yeah, you knew he'd be on the list...though if you've never read this one, check it out, it's my favorite of his sonnets, at this stage, anyway, I really like the topic and how he approaches it and resolves the matter in the end, I try and remember it when I feel down about someone...

"The Raven" by Edgar Allen Poe

Enough said, moving on...

"Rhapsody on a Windy Night" by T.S. Eliot

TWL and Prufrock are too long, and they're the two big works of Eliot's I love, but his shorter works are great, too, and this one's a great poem on memory and lives lived and all that...and the only redeemable thing that came out of "Cats"--not a fan of that musical, half for it being too pretentious for even me, and half for it mucking about with Eliot's poetry in an over-stylized and theatrical way--is that the song "Memory," which in fairness is a decent song by itself, brings some of the best lines in this poem to life.

"Ode on a Grecian Urn" by John Keats

I have a friend who's in love with Keats...and this poem, and it is a masterpiece, and the end line probably one of the most poignant and puzzling in all poetry, Eliot himself said it either ruined the poem to some extent or else he just couldn't get ...

"Beauty is truth, truth beauty..."
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
@Vaft:

I hope there's a good translation out there somewhere...I don't know any Swedish poetry, or authors, really, I think (I know Ibsen, but he was Norwegian.)

And I don't expect to have it accepted so I don't think it'll be a heart-grinding moment when it's rejected...my friends liked it, but they're friends--

Enemies are truer than friends when it comes to critiquing what you write.

(So if maple shows up, he can truthfully tell me what utter tripe it is!) ;)
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Oh crap...I got carried away trying to make that last sentence sound all alliterative with all the t's...

And now I definitely look like an idiot poser (at least more than usual) for using "tripe" and not being English. XD
LanGaidin (1509 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Here is my own poetry in honor of all you bastards that got me addicted to Diplomacy and the subsequent drinking problems that has led to. =P

An Ottoman Alcoholic and Diplomacy:

The game's begun, I need a drink
A glass of wine I start to think
A Tuscan wine sounds good to me
So I'm off to conquer Italy.

That Sangiovese hit just the spot.
But quenched my thirst, I think not.
A nice Bandol from Provence.
So now I'm off to ransack France.

Now wine is good for most affairs
But too much gets me nasty stares
So ale will fill my tummy well
It's England next in line to fell.

I think it's time for something stronger
Though I'm not sure I'll last much longer
It's off to Oktoberfest I go
The Germans I must overthrow.

Beer then liquor makes you sicker
To that I just sit and snicker
Vodka shots, I'll take them straight
The Russians I will subjugate

To Austria I now must trek
One last country left to check
On invitation of the Duke
But wait, I think I have to puke.



With love, from Austria

My allies from both near and far
Please come to rescue me
Do I truly know who my allies are
In this game, Diplomacy?

For autumn past fair Italy
Was neither friend nor foe
But now their fleets are near my sea
To war? I do not know.

And Turkey, why ‘twas just last spring
In battle we did join
Quick death to Russia we did bring
And to them, brought their ruin.

Yet now both to my right and left
The Turks and Romans lie
I think unless I am quite deft
I shall be next to die.

Sargmacher (0 DX)
14 Apr 12 UTC
"and the subsequent drinking problems that has led to" lol!

+1 for the poem, I'm guessing you wrote it yourself?
LanGaidin (1509 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Yes... it was one of those rare moments of inspiration.
semck83 (229 D(B))
14 Apr 12 UTC
lol, that's awesome LG. Well done.

I agree about Grecian Urn, obi. Incredible poem, and incredible line. For the heck of it, though, I'll choose different ones. These are not ranked in any order, except that the first is my favorite:

1) "Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard," by Thomas Gray. Simply epic in every way. The best poem in English?

2) "Love and Age," by Thomas Love Peacock. Great at capturing the bittersweetness of passing time.

3) "Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood," by William Wordsworth. Beautiful and profound.

4) "A Channel Crossing," by Rupert Brooke. Hilarious.

5) "The Last Ride Together," by Robert Browning.

There are tons more I'd love to put but I'll show restraint. :-)
krellin (80 DX)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Most of it is pretentious nonsense....and most lover's of poetry I find simply like what they have been instructed to like by their professors...(eh hem...OBI...cough cough...) Nothing unique or insightful here...move along...move along...
Not as good as Lan's, which i love, but this was something i did a few years ago, just putting it up to try and encourage the trend :)

If lightning strikes
and our wives are weeping
while we are
forever sleeping
How will we hear death's bell toll?

When we fall down
to never rise
what will we see
With incorporeal eyes?

When we are dead
our bodies gone
is there a way
That we live on?

And when you know
where we go
is it too late
To tell your fate?
iMurk789 (100 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost

The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe

The Tyger by William Blake

Those are just some I enjoy, I don't have a top 5 though.
S.E. Peterson (100 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
so much depends
upon

a red wheel
barrow

glazed with rain
water

beside the white
chickens

- William Carlos Williams
fiedler (1293 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
William Blake - Auguries of Innocence

http://www.artofeurope.com/blake/bla3.htm

Obi - you are going to publish your poem *here* first right?
C'mon - we deserve it!
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
The magazine won't consider anything that's been posted online before... :/

So, either I'll post it here when I get rejected...

Or if by some miracle I get it accepted...well, it'll be published and online anyway, then. ;)
Manas (818 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
The road not Taken by Robert Frost
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
OH!

Shoot, and I forgot, maybe my favorite of all!

"The Lady of Shallot" by Alfred Lord Tennyson!

"Ulysses" is fantastic, too, but this...this is just somehow a perfect poem of...of rhyme and themes and old and new...it has my pre-Shakespeare favorite subject, the Arthurian Legend...

This, Sonnet 30, and either Ode on a Grecian rn or She Walks in Beauty, Top 3! :D
Zmaj (215 D(B))
15 Apr 12 UTC
A sweet and sad poem by Houseman. Appropriately, it's a war poem. Citing from memory:

I didn't lose my heart in the summer's even,
When roses to the moonlight burst apart.
When plumes were under foot and lead was flying,
In blood and smoke and flame I lost my heart.

I lost it to a soldier, a foeman,
A chap that didn't kill me, but he tried;
He took the saber straight and took it striking,
And laughed, and kissed his hand to me, and died.
FieryPhoenix (227 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
If by Rudyard Kipling
Or
The True Gentlman by John Walter Wayland
LanGaidin (1509 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
If is a great one and i like Invictus.
LanGaidin (1509 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Ancient.. I like yours better, far more profound than a silly dip ditty:)
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
"If" is a good poem indeed...even if Kipling likely was a fascist and racist...
Putin33 (111 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Nachtgedanken - Heinrich Heine



23 replies
Gobbledydook (1389 D(B))
14 Apr 12 UTC
Deutschland: how to play?
I am not very good at playing Germany at all, press or gunboat.
Tips?
11 replies
Open
apem8 (1295 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Texastough
I want everyone to private message this guy as he was too rubbish to win when anyone else was playing so he didnt draw even though russia had helped nim all the way through (russia isnt me)
he is the worst type of player and nobody shud play with him ever again.
49 replies
Open
Troodonte (3379 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
EOG of great gunboat game!!!
gameID=82957
What a game!!! We reached 1927!!!
I'll write something tomorrow...now I have to sleep.
11 replies
Open
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
11 Apr 12 UTC
Overheating in Ubuntu
So, that thread on Ubuntu made me want to try again on my laptop. I installed 11.10 and I have the same problem as before. On windows, my computer idles at 33-49degC. In Ubuntu, it idles around 82degC. What's with the 40degC increase? Thoughts?
27 replies
Open
cspieker (18223 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
EOG: Sabado Picante
16 replies
Open
dubmdell (556 D)
30 Mar 12 UTC
Postal Diplomacy
Vaftrudner had this amazing idea for the weirdest way to play Diplomacy ever. Seriously guys. Need six.
231 replies
Open
dubmdell (556 D)
15 Apr 12 UTC
Who would win in a gunboat between seven of yourself?
A fun little exercise that has been helping my play style recently was to learn what bias I have in game. So pull out your dip board and make what you think is the best gunboat opening for each power, then play each power to the best of your ability to win. Who wins? Who gets eliminated first?
4 replies
Open
King Atom (100 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Well, I'm Back From Florida...
And somehow this seems relevant:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00M7CojclWM&feature=related
2 replies
Open
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
RIP Piermario Morosini
:(
4 replies
Open
Troodonte (3379 D)
14 Apr 12 UTC
Photo and Video shooting
So anyone interested in photography an video?
3 replies
Open
Barn3tt (41969 D)
13 Apr 12 UTC
Barn3tt's Bigger, Better and Badder Challenge
35 replies
Open
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