Quote:
Originally Posted by Fantomen
Quote:
Originally Posted by Raiel
Finally, my intended victim has confirmed that he did attempt to attack my province from the target province and he was confused about why his armies didn't attack.
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I think this is the explanation in this case. I have seen this many times. Two armies attacking each other obviously has a chance to cancel each others movement.
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By "cancel each others
movement" do you mean "cancel the
movement of both armies"? When that occurs, it's the
movement bug.
But like Sombre says, any piddly little army moving from A->B can stop the
movement of a big army moving from B->A, if there is just one fight occurring in B. Each army has a chance to cancel the other's
movement, by successfully moving into the other's province. If the turn resolves, and the big army stayed in B and the little army stayed in A, and everyone just sat around drinking tea and looking at flowers, that's the
movement bug.
I also agree that the
movement bug can rear its ugly head even when there is no visible enemy army, and it also shows up when there is an enemy army that does not have orders to move anywhere.