(June 14th, 2015, 14:50)Whosit Wrote: Having read the last few pages of your thread, I feel like I'm compelled to defend my good name.Feel free to defend yourself as much as you like--I'm sure I'll need to defend myself soon
I'd like to start off by saying that I was never unaware of Elum's dominating position. You might have been unaware that when I was battling Grimace, Elum ended my participation in that war by completely destroying my army. The other main consideration was geography, which I don't recall seeing brought up. Basically, with Elum taking all of the Korean gains away from me, I had only two ways to attack: By land, first having to traverse a narrow, windy bit of land through enemy culture, or by sea which Elum dominated with advanced naval tech. Even when Elum was off making war elsewhere, geography allowed him to leave garrisons behind that would have crushed any army I could field, simply because it would take 6+ turns for me to even get to one of his cities. I might have been able to launch a naval invasion that could have captured or razed 1-2 minor island cities, but that would have had no real impact.
So, from my perspective, I was in a losing position and had only two bad options to pick from: 1) Attack Elum and die, 2) Attack you and have a 0.1% chance of gaining enough territory to maybe find a way to hold my own. Obviously, since you were the one I was attacking, you didn't take too favorably to that, but I really wasn't as irrational as you painted me. I was just desperate.
Anyway, good game, and if we both end up in PB27... maybe we won't start as neighbors again?
I remember the narrow points from my early scouting, but wasn't thinking about it as much (and probably forgot about it entirely). I also don't know how he could always defend his border cities while I couldn't--and still, you'd need to make more gains with me than you would with Elum, even if I'm not making horrible moves (including not considering at all the special ability of Keshiks ).