Disintegration
Posts: 27
Joined: 10/17/2007 Status: offline
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1796 game, playing as France. Austria fell quickly and the ruthlessly opportunistic Russians, Prussians, and Swedes decided to pile on Britain. This led to the division, distraction and partial destruction of the British fleet which meant I could land a decent army in Scotland and eventually occupy England, but not before smashing two different invading British armies. At that point,a cycle of surrenders occurred that surprised me. British morale would dip to -980 or so, and they would surrender to another nation. Following this their morale would pop back up to -800 for a turn. Since I was still sitting on London their morale would drop again and they'd surrender to someone else again. They successively surrendered to Sweden, Russia, and Prussia, and finally surrendered to me about 6 turns after their morale first dropped below -900. The Russians and Swedes had previously beaten English fleets, but during the interval in question none of the other countries involved did anything that would cause a major morale hit to Britain. What's the cause of this bizarre routine? Shouldn't a surrendering nation surrender to the nation that has an army camped on its capital? Is there some sort of national animus playing into this - i.e., the English hate the French so much they'll surrender to anyone else first - or is it a built-in bias against the human player? And why should national morale rise several hundred points after a surrender when the condition that forced the surrender is in no way relieved by it? Also, what determines the number of surrender points? I haven't been able to determine any order in the process, nor do diplomats seem to make any difference. It's always a total of 4500, 6500, or 7000 - I have yet to see a surrender that wasn't one of these totals. Finally, is there any way for a victorious power to reject a surrender and put the squeeze on for more concessions? After all, if I'm Napoleon invading Austria or Prussia for the 2nd or 3rd time my goal is not a negotiated peace and a small territorial transfer, it's to crush my rival sufficiently that it can no longer threaten me, at least for several years. Napoleon certainly didn't accept the RL equivalent of a 4500-point surrender from Prussia in 1806-7! (I haven't tried to add up all the points that treaty was worth, but between the loss of half of Prussia's territory, the severe reduction in the army, and the massive indemnity it seems to me it was well in excess of 10,000.)
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