Cypress wrote:woot wrote:
A faction may not lose more than 20% of it's members during the war or it will be automatically disqualified.
I agree with everything but this, I believe the 20% is simply too little and it should be increased to something such as 40/45 of the active war members.
20% is a good chunk of any faction.
100 total members = 20 players
50 = 10
25 = 5
and so on.
If 20% of a faction's total members drop out during a war, there's a good chance their faction had issues with their invite standards. Also, keep in mind, a faction's total members may not even be necessarily active or log in during the war, which would, in theory, increase that percentage requirement.
Cypress wrote:
Is there no minimum activity required per day/week?
War Rules
[fsize=x-large]W1) Victory Conditions[/fsize]
A minimum of 45 hours of playtime must be achieved by all participating factions during a war - failure to do so will result in a forfeit on the 3rd offense. (players idling for 300+ seconds will be automatically kicked from the server)
Calogero wrote:
woot wrote:
Example: [Team 1] Tattaglia vs. [Team 2] Stracci & Kemirov with a prize of $300m
When the war starts, Tattaglia will automatically get $300m deducted from their faction bank, Stracci and Kemirov will get $150m deducted from their faction bank. This puts the prize of the war to $600m.
Why don't all participating factions pay the war fee of 300M ? Wouldn't it be more fair and attractive for the faction that's warring alone ? The way it is described above encourages 1 vs multiple factions since it doesn't really have cons
A 2 vs 1 isn't meant to be fair.
If a faction manages to get themselves into a lone wolf war and have no alliance support to back them up, the war will almost always be in the favor of the opposition in terms of power. However, there are disadvantages to this; the team with the bigger alliance will have to distribute the prize pot evenly between them and have shared statistics (kill-death ratio) which may or may not be in their best interest in the long-term of the war.