Talk:Panama (Nova)/@comment-32600953-20170718154933: Difference between revisions

From EarthMC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
>Tailz8003
(Created page with "I knew the server had more honour then, even ''outposts'' would be removed by a fight. Nowadays, those are placed into other territories with the expectation that they would ...")
 
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
I knew the server had more honour then, even ''outposts'' would be removed by a fight.
I knew the server had more honour then, even ''outposts'' would be removed by a fight.


Nowadays, those are placed into other territories with the expectation that they would either stay permanently, or the player who places them would get themselves banned for doing something stupid, and the lingering outpost would eventually go away after 40 days.
Nowadays, those are placed into other territories with the expectation that they would either stay permanently, or the player who places them would get themselves banned for doing something stupid, and the lingering outpost would eventually go away after 40 days. Would a skirmish remove them? They don't even care about their lives in real life, much less in-game. You could kill them 50 times, and strip them of everything they have, and they would still refuse to remove it.


You may thank Praxis for making that mentality become irreversible.
You may thank Praxis for inspiring that mentality.

Latest revision as of 22:45, 6 January 2023

I knew the server had more honour then, even outposts would be removed by a fight.

Nowadays, those are placed into other territories with the expectation that they would either stay permanently, or the player who places them would get themselves banned for doing something stupid, and the lingering outpost would eventually go away after 40 days. Would a skirmish remove them? They don't even care about their lives in real life, much less in-game. You could kill them 50 times, and strip them of everything they have, and they would still refuse to remove it.

You may thank Praxis for inspiring that mentality.