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What may be a dumb question
Posted: Tue Dec 31, 2013 10:43 pm
by aoffen
I am trying to work out whether it is possible to play WIF by email. I see hotseat is up and multiplayer netplay is coming at some point, but is 2 player PBEM possible at this stage?
Regards
Andrew
RE: What may be a dumb question
Posted: Wed Jan 01, 2014 5:48 am
by graf spee
Look in this thread.
tm.asp?m=3503968
There are some guys playing PBEM
Bob
RE: What may be a dumb question
Posted: Wed Jan 01, 2014 9:12 pm
by aoffen
So, can I deduce from this that PBEM does work, but all the interactions between players during the turn make it impractical - or at least very time consuming?
RE: What may be a dumb question
Posted: Thu Jan 02, 2014 12:26 am
by Numdydar
Correct. Which is why they stopped.
RE: What may be a dumb question
Posted: Thu Jan 02, 2014 9:49 am
by aoffen
Bugger

RE: What may be a dumb question
Posted: Thu Jan 02, 2014 2:59 pm
by brian brian
a pure email game of World in Flames would be difficult, but not impossible. the game is designed for player interaction during each other's moves, so you have to work around that in various ways.
the quartet of players trying MWiF via Dropbox looks promising.
personally, I would suggest a mix of techniques, including text messages between the players, and die rolls from a server with MWiF manual dice override feature perhaps. even a pure Hotseat game would get challenging at points. it would also help to have an opponent who works on their decision making in advance, rather than only when you can be in touch with them. that would be the biggest key. aborb the map, make your decisions ………. all ahead of Time.
RE: What may be a dumb question
Posted: Fri Jan 03, 2014 12:25 am
by JagWars
I do not know if this will help, but a few of my mates and I played the old computer WiF using instant messaging. We all agreed to be at our computers at the same time. When a response was needed from an opposing player, an email of the game file would be sent to the other player followed by a text message requesting his response. He would then open the file, decide whether to respond or not and relay his response back by text message, and so on so that it essentially became a FtF game without all of us being present at the same location.