31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1901: (Halt): Let's do this =) |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1901: (B-RICH94): Sorry, I should have made it start sooner... my bad |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1901: (Halt): haha tis alright |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1901: Good luck! |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1901: you too |
31 May 13 UTC | Autumn, 1904: You are doing very well. Your opening is solid and most Austria's ignore the value of a quick offense. |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1905: Thanks... I've only played once before as Austria but somehow I did much better than I'm doing now. Do you have a lot of experience on this map? |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1905: I wouldn't say I have a lot of experience - perhaps I've played 7 times. What I have going for me is chess. I used to play a lot (still do occasionally). It left me with a solid grasp on tactics - especially when left in a 1 v1 scenario. I am able to see openings and risks that most players tend to ignore. I am also able to assess situations from a pure tactical perspective quickly, allowing me to adapt to unfamiliar maps since I don't rely on memorization much less as instinct. |
31 May 13 UTC | Autumn, 1905: I think you've got me... it will be tough for me to stay in this |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1906: Your position isn't completely lost. Your strength in Italy is still formidable, but you'll need to shore up in the Center quickly. Usually in classic, it's a fight between the 4 critical spots. Stp, Tun, Mun, Ber. They form the tips of the northern, southern and central flanks respectively |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1907: hmm, you can still stalemate me. Interesting. |
31 May 13 UTC | Autumn, 1907: If I had one more unit earlier that I could have moved north to continue blocking Stp, this could have been really interesting. |
31 May 13 UTC | Spring, 1908: Every action has an effect. |
31 May 13 UTC | nice game |
31 May 13 UTC | Good game :) |