Eye of the Eagle
or The Goal's The Thing!!
by Brian Cannon
It s a brand new game. You ve opened the latest issue of your favorite Zine
to the gamestart announcement and discovered you are <hmmm> the Kaiser! Well",
you think to yourself, it could have been worse - I could have gotten Austria."
Experienced player that you are, you immediately begin contacting the other
players and formulating your Master Plan. After the first round of cards and
letters the Witches seem to have become the focus of some general concern and a
passable strategy begins to suggest itself.
First you ll join France in taking out England, while instigating an A/I/R
crushing of Turkey. Then you ll encourage France into the Med and play on the
Italian fears to form a G/I to defeat France (and secure the West for yourself).
Meanwhile, you ll talk Austria into a G/A to defeat the Czar (pointing out HIS
need to have a rear free of enemy forces). By this time you ll have Germany,
England, Scandinavia, the Low Countries, St. Pete, and Northern France for 14.
By focusing Austria on the threat the Italian navy poses to his Med provinces,
you ll have been encouraging the build of an Austrian fleet or two and you'll
use that to raise just enough tension between A/I to stab and lunge into War,
Mar, Spa, and either Venice, Por, or Moscow for the Solo. OK, it ll take
refining and certainly lots of slick talking along the way. But, hey! Who ever
said winning a Dip game was easy?
With your Master Strategy firmly in mind, you set to work to talk the other
players into following YOUR plan. Throughout 1901 letters fly fast and
furious, and as you review the Fall 1901 game report you can see everything is
falling into place for you. France is in Bel & the Channel and is +2; you re in
Den, Hol, and the North Sea and are +2; A/R are attacking Turkey; Italy is set
for a Lepanto invasion; and (warned by you <heh, heh>) Turkey is making the best
defense possible. He ll go down, but it ll take a while - which suits you fine.
1902 & 03 breeze by with you and France carefully coordinating the demise of
England, the splitting of the spoils, and the placement of pieces while I/A/R
defeat Turkey, splitting his spoils three ways and getting their units a little
mixed up in the process. What could be better for you ?!!? You shift into
Phase-2 of your master plan independently writing Italy (about G/I vs. F) and
Austria (about G/A vs. R) and wait for the Zine with barely restrained glee at
how clever you are and how well everything is going. . . . . . . .
Huh ?? Hold on here!?! This must be the wrong game. The GM must have read the
wrong orders!! Sure, Italy is moving against France (that s good) BUT
Austria just passed up an easy stab and, WITH Russia is moving strongly against
. . . YOU ???? Wait just a dog-gone minute!! What happened ?? You write
again to everyone and are rewarded with . . . Total Silence (???) from I/A/R.
You don t dare stab France now - you NEED him to fend off that awful
Eastern menace. Maybe you can patch up a stalemate line and find some advantage
. . . but . . . aw heck - this wasn t the way things were supposed
to go!! Everything was going so smooothly and then <crash> <bang> <thump> the
motor just fell out!!! What Went
Wrong ???" you cry out to the Fates.
What went wrong had nothing to do with "The Fates", nor with bad luck. It
wasn t some subtle clue you dropped in one of your letters, or the machinations
of that treacherous and perfidious wight in Vienna or that frog in Paris. It
wasn t that the Czar suddenly and for no reason took a disliking to you and
decided beer might be a welcome change from vodka. In fact, what I/A/R just did
was perfectly reasonable, logical, and <worst of all> PREDICTABLE given
the circumstances. What went wrong was quite simply this - You Forgot Your
Strategy. While you were busy coordinating the defeat of England and
figuring the everything was going just as you planned, the Eastern alliance was
watching the development of a solid (and threatening) Western alliance (G/F)
coupled with a sudden silence from those players. When they finally received the
German offers in Winter 03 they were faced with choosing between continuing an
alliance that was working well (and profitably) or stabbing an ally and trusting
the good intentions of a player that (a) hadn t written a meaningful letter in
two years and (b) could quite possibly use the resulting confusion to stick with
HIS ally and roll to a solid G/F two-way - at their expense. Given those choices
their decision was to be expected. The sad thing is, all of this could" have
been avoided. Remember, you had them eating out of your hands (figuratively)
back in 01 as you spun your webs & tales and worked your diplomatic magic. And
then . . . you let yourself get distracted by the Western battle, neglected your
diplomacy, and allowed the Eastern players to recover from your spells long
enough to see the threat you posed.
And this brings us to the point of this article - The first fundamental
characteristic of the Expert Dipper: The Eye of the Eagle" - the ability to keep
focused, through thick and thin, on what will be needed to emerge victorious
with a solo victory. Remember, as a player in Dip you will almost never have the
ability to DIRECTLY control the moves of any other player (barring an occasional
puppet). They will make the moves you want only when you can beguile them into
seeing those moves as actually being in their interest. And that takes constant
attention and effort. As Lincoln said to Grant when he wanted to ram a
particularly necessary (but unpopular) action down the throat of the War
Department in 1864 I repeat to you it will neither be done nor attempted,
unless you watch it every hour and day and force it."
So you too, if you would succeed with minimum reliance on the fickleness of
luck, must show yourself diligent in (shall we phrase it this way?) keeping
the wool pulled over the eyes of your victims." Sure It s difficult to
maintain this focus. It takes concentration and discipline. Not everyone can do
it. But then, did you think a Solo win in Dip came easy?? Oh you
silly, silly, you (:-). And remember this - your opponents face the same
struggle. If you can keep your focus while they" get distracted, it can make the
difference between a solid draw and the ultimate goal of the Dip Purist - a Solo
Victory! So, what can you do to help pull this off? So glad you asked. <grin>
Read on!
Emotion can be your worst enemy - and your greatest ally!! Like fire,
it can save your life ... or destroy you. Time after time, in game after game,
Dipsters, right and left, allow themselves to be swayed by: anger and lust for
revenge due to a stab by an ally; fear over the threat posed by one opponent s
concentrated attack; excitement over the success of a particularly dangerous or
clever tactic; wide eyed, too eager, anticipation when an ally leaves their rear
wide open to a ridiculously easy stab; and more. The player begins to think
primarily about that one enemy, or ploy, or opportunity. Their correspondence
becomes filled with discussion of how they want revenge for that stab that @$#$%
can t be allowed to get away with it" or what tactics they and their allies can
use to counter that threat or exploit that opportunity. If they think about the
future at all, they mostly assume they will be able to work something out" once
they ve dealt with this one matter. How much better it would be to keep the
master plan on track and not NEED to work something out." After all, if you can
get to your goal (that elusive Solo) what does it matter what others did in the
process. If you WIN, it means they ve LOST - and you can hardly do anything
worse to them than that!!!
So here is a cardinal Rule for those who aspire to Dip Masterdom -
First, you must Master yourself" (that is, your own emotions). When the
unexpected (and unwelcome) has occurred, put aside your instinctive fears or
angers or hopes; take some deep breaths; reexamine the ENTIRE board and the
moves of EVERY player (who else is doing what to whom); and ask yourself afresh
with the current position and apparent player opportunities, what strategy can I
employ to get the other powers fighting each other instead of me - to position
myself for a comeback or a win?" and How can I convince other players that the
current board position actually threatens them more than me - or will if they
aren t careful?" This doesn t mean that you have forgotten about the event that
aroused your emotions - only that you have found a Stratagem that (with its
possibilities for improving YOUR position and advancing YOU toward a victory)
is, frankly, far more important than any petty fears or angers.
Next, if Emotions can be so devastating to your own Diplomacizing, don t be
afraid to use emotions to sabotage your opponent." In one game, I
absolutely needed an opponent to lay off my ally long enough for him to
accomplish a breakthrough elsewhere on the board. So I wrote this opponent
telling him (quite truthfully, actually) that his best bet was to keep on with
the attack. But I wrote the letter as a flagrantly arrogant demand for him to do
so and with a belittling tone that indicated he lacked the ability to see for
himself what was in his best interests. And it worked. As desired, he promptly
pulled back from my ally and threw all his forces against me. He was dead set on
punishing me for what I had said and done (I had also implemented a piddling
little one- center stab the season before). As a result - due to my ally s being
free to fashion his breakthrough - I jumped in two years to a solid 15 en route
to (with good tactical play) a solo win!
And there are other emotions you can stir in your opponents and victims to
aid your ends such as. . . . Discussing how E/G/F seem to have stopped fighting
and so have likely formed a Western Triple invokes Fear to get I/A/R off your
Turkish case (long enough to regroup). Offering (as Germany) to support France
into the North Sea splitting England s forces in two (and gaining an unopposed
walk-in to Edinburgh in the Fall) invokes Eagerness and Anticipation to get him
utterly committed to a war with England (and vice versa) that will hold E/F in
thrall even when you and Italy later plow into the French underbelly. Discussing
with Turkey how your R/T alliance (having defeated Austria with Italian help)
will just steamroll thru Italy and all other opposition invokes Hope and Great
Expectations of success to lull him to the TRUE reason for your fleet moving
thru (into) Constantinople in the Spring - a vicious stab by you and your new
Italian ally. The list is limited only by your own creativity and deviousness.
But in each case, the main goal is the same - to use emotion to distract your
victim from the greater strategic implications of the game so that you can sell
him on YOUR spin and manipulate him to YOUR ends.
Does this sound Difficult? Dangerous?? Demanding??? It s also worth
the effort!! There is nothing more exhilarating than watching 6 other Dippers
dance to YOUR tune move after move - secure in the unshakable belief that THEY
are the ones pulling YOUR strings <heh, heh>. Is this Devious? Is it Dasterdly??
Is it Underhanded and Sneaky??? Oh Yes!!!! And you ll just Love It when the
plan comes together."
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