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Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:27:00 -
[1]
Edited by: Seleene on 11/10/2006 17:27:27 Author's Note:
The following is written purely from a player point of view. If you are expecting some in-character role-playing that is not what this is.
All times herein are EVE Standard.
Laying Plans
The preparations for the attack on the Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate (IAC) began almost immediately after the Battle for 9UY. MC logistics continued to move more and more supplies into our forward bases of ISS Fabrica and ISS Condiso while our combat pilots continued to patrol the areas around 9UY with Ushra'Khan. The MC Capital ship fleet even took part in a joint operation with UK that took down a multi-billion isk Atrocious shipyard POS.
As the anti-pirate patrols continued and our logistics teams continued to pour supplies into our forward bases, an interesting twist of events led to progressive talks between the MC and FIX. A series of agreements were reached and, as a result, FIX happily agreed to fly alongside the MC for the duration of the IAC contract.
The rank and file MC and FIX member had no knowledge of the pending contract on IAC. Our intelligence suggested that in order for any attack to succeed that we would need as much surprise as possible. To effect this, less than ten people in MC or FIX knew the name of our target until less than thirty minutes before the first shots were fired. Our pilots knew they were gearing up for something "big" and simply trusted in their leaders to provide a follow through for all the effort they were putting forth into preparation.
However, all of our preparation did not escape the notice of certain entities...
Suspicious Minds
While all of this was going on, the political landscape had changed considerably. On 25 September, ASCN announced that they had completed building an Avatar-class Titan in almost complete secrecy.
Three days later, on the morning of 28 September, ASCN and AXE announced they were setting the MC and FIX to neutral standings. The build-up of our forces in Providence, combined with some talk of cyno fields which never did make sense to me, had apparently be misinterpreted as some kind of pre-emptive build-up against ASCN.
All the announcement really did was get MC and FIX talking to each other more as we both shrugged in bewilderment as to what was going on with the ASCN leadership. It was understandable that they might have seen our build up of forces, but no one had bothered to ask us for clarification.
We soon found out why ASCN was so on edge as on the same afternoon that Cyvok made his statement to MC and FIX, BoB declared war on ASCN and began pouring ships into Paragon Soul from Period Basis. The MC looked upon this development with a sense of detached interest, curious to see what kind of contract offers might emerge from such a conflict. Still, we had a job to do against IAC and the focus was on that.
As the forums continued to heat up and conspiracy theories flew left and right, the leadership of MC and FIX smiled inwardly at how all of the speculation was turning attention completely away from our actual target... -
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:28:00 -
[2]
- -
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:28:00 -
[3]
Edited by: Seleene on 11/10/2006 17:29:06 7 October - Lockdown
After a fairly uneventful night, IAC finally put together a formidable defense fleet that catches a FIX relief fleet inbound to G-7 around 0750. They meet up in MB-NKE and the result is disastrous - twelve FIX battleships and one MC battleship perish in exchange for a single enemy BS kill. The message has been sent - IAC is not going to go quietly. While a bitter pill to swallow, the defeat galvanizes everyone to be more on edge and ready for anything. MC and FIX FC's prepare for a very long weekend. The rest of the morning was very quiet.
As soon as the servers come up after downtime, it is confirmed that IAC no longer has sovereignty over the system. McFIX forces begin to log in and move on the IAC outpost. Resistance is minimal. MC Dreads jump in to assist in taking down the outpost's shields. At 1320, the station falls and is taken over by the MC. The bar is raided and I steal Tyraxx's special office chair.
At 1353, I post the traditional Hugh announcement on EVE-O. In less than eighteen hours, G-7 has been transformed from a semi-peaceful IAC stronghold to occupied territory. The announcement was withheld until we had ownership of the station and it has the desired effect - IAC rallies their own people and starts calling in friends and allies.
McFIX forces keep a stranglehold on G-7 for most of the afternoon. Intel reports start coming in of the lengths IAC is going to in order to fight us. Our scouts patrol the surrounding systems, eventually reporting of an IAC fleet building up in F4R2-Q. A small MC BS fleet moves to break up this force, supported by four MC carriers. At 1727, the battle takes place. It's a hell of a fight, raging for nearly ten minutes. MC losses include 1 BS and two support ships. The IAC fleet loses six battleships and the enemy task force scatters.
Things are really starting to heat up now. IAC numbers in G-7 are swelling as more and more log on inside the now MC-flagged outpost. The McFIX gang is holding steady at around 70-80 people, about half in battleships. Around 2120 we receive word that a combined CVA / IAC fleet is building up in F4R that numbers close to 100. Part of that fleet came forward and we caught them on the jump in then chased the remnants around the system. Over the next thirty minutes, we picked off thirteen battleships plus various support ships support for no losses.
IAC hadn't been idle and while chasing this fleet around, more and more IAC pilots were logging on inside the station. Our camp of the station was reduced due to calling in support to track down the fleet which had jumped in. This was fine though; since we owned the station, anyone who undocked was locked out so we hoped pulling people off the station camp would get the enemy outside. At last, there was a mass undock of about 60 hostiles, putting odds in local up to about 160 against our 80.
After a few false starts which produced nothing more than a couple frigate kills, the enemy fleet finally got their act together and formed up at the outpost. Within a couple minutes they were shooting at it. We'd managed to recharge the shields to over 85% since we'd taken it earlier in the day so we had plenty of time. We spent about ten minutes getting solid intel on the size and composition of the enemy fleet and setting up our covert ops for warp ins. Finally, the word came down - "Prepare to warp in thirty seconds." -
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:28:00 -
[4]
Edited by: Seleene on 11/10/2006 17:28:29 A week went by and our build-up continued. The MC kept both ASCN and AXE set to positive status to ensure none of our pilots made any mistakes. Whether by accident or intent, a few ASCN pilots screwed up. Tensions were already high where ASCN was concerned; a few incidents where ASCN gate camps locked MC ships (usually grounds for hostile return action in 0.0 for us) and then an actual shooting incident prompted the MC to make a choice with regard to the safety of our pilots.
On 5 October, I announced that the MC was setting ASCN & AXE to -10. We would not seek them out, but they would be fired upon if encountered near our area of operations. Even as tempers flared and the accusations flew, MC & FIX scouts finished their work in the target system of G-7WUF. We had screenshots and complete layouts of every POS in the area and knew exactly what to expect.
IAC had thrown us one wrinkle tho that caught us completely by surprise - a new Galentee outpost had been 'hatched' earlier in the day. Now there were two main bases where our targets could operate from.
Of course, everyone assumed that all of our activity was yet more evidence that we were getting ready to make a move on behalf of assisting BoB. On Friday night, we gleefully proved everyone wrong...
6 October - Blitzkrieg
At 2100, an MC fleet left ISS Condiso with orders to lock down the IAC outpost in G-7. Close behind was a FIX fleet whose goal was to lock down the gates of the system. One hour later, the MC fleet received word that a decent sized IAC blockade was waiting at the jump-in to F4RQ-2, the system with the new IAC outpost. We assumed that IAC either suspected our intent or was just being cautious.
With the clock ticking, the MC fleet commander jumped right in and opened fire on the smaller IAC blockade, shattering it and sending the survivors running for cover. We soon learned that IAC had still had us set to blue due to a recent agreement from the contract against the Pirate Coalition in 9UY a few weeks earlier and that their blockade had not been intended for us at all. Oh well, the cat was most certainly out of the bag now!!
The MC Fleet arrived in G-7 fifteen minutes later and went 'NBSI' on everything within range, which admittedly wasnĘt much. Within the next fifteen minutes, the FIX fleet arrived securing the gates while the MC locked down the outpost. There is no meaningful resistance and friendly forces are overwhelming. Surprise is complete.
Tyrrax Thorrk announced the invasion on the EVE-O forums at 2228. A combined MC / FIX cap ship fleet consisting of twenty-two Dreadnaughts and seven Carriers jumped into G-7 at almost the same moment and quickly began to pound on the POS defense grid.
McFIX Cap Ship Fleet
The rest of the evening proceeded pretty much according to plan. All five large towers in the system were put into reinforced mode but each one had between two to three days of strontium in it. Someone coins the term 'McFIX' on the EVE-O forums. We liked the name and spent at least twenty minutes on TS arguing over what kind of sandwich it should be.
Many of our Dread drivers switched over to carriers to lend support to the US time zone players who were now showing up in the battle area. After a few more kills and little real action, the Euro time zone people finally called it a night.
-
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:28:00 -
[5]
Edited by: Seleene on 11/10/2006 17:31:19 By 0830, we had nearly forty people in gang, including twenty-two battleships. Local was still around 160. After a quick break, we made the decision to make an all or nothing go against the blob at the station. We would warp in and stay until they were all dead or we took too many losses to stay in the system.
At 0843, we began the final attack on the remnants enemy fleet. Five minutes later, it was all over. Eight enemy battleships went down and the remainder of the fleet scattered. It didn't take long for us to capitalize on our victory.
By the time the station was ours we had destroyed fifty-eight enemy ships, thirty-three of them battleships and not suffered a single loss of any kind. Regardless, we were still heavily outnumbered in local so moving against the POS's was still very risky. In the end, we waited too long, jumping in half a dozen dreads to hit the POS. The shields were already above 50% and we didn't have enough time / firepower to put it back down before downtime hit.
At this point, we knew that G-7 was not going to fall. Without the ability to deploy a POS of our own and the uncertainty as to what the 100+ enemies in local were doing, we decided to let it go. With the one POS out of reinforced mode, IAC and their allies regained sovereignty after downtime and moved quickly to re-take their outpost again.
We made them pay for it, ending the day with one-hundred and fourteen kills, forty-eight of them battleships. MC lost a single covert ops to a POS. FIX, who got jumped by the initial uber blob, lost seven battleships on the day and about an equal number of support ships.
It was our best day on record and we were proud of the work we'd done, but it felt hollow.
IN LOVING MEMORY
Closing Thoughts
What if the node hadn't crashed seven times? What if we had been able to keep IAC locked down in their station? What if we'd had just fifteen or twenty more people online? What if, what if, what if...?
This is the frustration of EVE at the moment - no matter how carefully you plan, no matter how determined you are, no matter how good you are, sometimes the servers just don't give a damn. :)
Too many variables led to us not being able to achieve our goals. To be honest though, it's not all the servers fault. IAC deserves all the credit in the world for doing several things:
1.) All the free beer seems to have earned you a lot of friends! I don't think anyone in the community (except maybe yourselves) expected to see so many show up to help in your defense.
2.) Two and a half to three days of strontium in the towers? FFS!! Did someone tip you off or is that normal for you? I freely admit that this one thing screwed us more than any other development. Had you not done this, you would have been in a hell of a lot more trouble!
3.) I saved the best for last - You fought like demons. You didn't hide and cower away. Even when we were raining destruction upon you and ships were exploding left and right, another IAC guy would warp in and fill the hole. You guys totally deserve your land. Local stayed mostly clean and you have our respect.
And so, we have retired from the field. Savor your victory, such as it is. You have earned it. Perhaps the next story I write will have a different ending. Only time will tell... 
-
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:28:00 -
[6]
Edited by: Seleene on 11/10/2006 17:30:40 After downtime, the station passed back into MC hands and we began the process of charging the shields again. All of the POS's in the system were still in reinforced mode, with the earliest one coming out at 0300 the next day.
IAC made one attempt to re-take the station which ended in a decisive defeat for them. At 1226, a battle took pace that saw the McFIX fleet lose a Vengeance and a Megathron. The attacking IAC forces lost eight battleships and nine support ships before scattering. It was the only major fleet action of the day.
The rest of the day consisted of IAC sitting in their reinforced POS while McFIX fleets kept G-7 and the surrounding systems swept clean. One particularly amusing kill was a Scorpion that strayed outside one of the POS bubbles and got killed by a group of our long range snipers.
It had been an exhausting couple of days and the first of IAC POS's would be coming out of reinforced early in the morning. The two-three days of strontium IAC had placed in their towers had really done a number on our scheduling. The good news was that a large number of our players had Monday off and would be around to hopefully finish the job.
Then, the entire world seemed to show up in G-7...
9 October - Does anyone have extra ammo??
We knew IAC was going to bring friends into this... we just didn't expect how many!
IAC, CVA, S*****rdly, AXE, D2... Hell, even a few Goons showed up! Local peaked in G-7 at over four hundred people. The node crashed five times. It didn't stop Stradivarious from sniping the hell out of several ships in his Machariel, and our FC's managed to get a few ganks on the board between node crashes but for the most part, we did the only thing we could: we watched and waited.
We managed to avoid any losses and just played it cool. These people couldn't stay here the whole time and we were in no great hurry. It was a foregone conclusion that we would miss the window to take out the first POS but there was still one more chance in the afternoon after downtime. We resolved to do as much damage as possible to the enemy fleet before then.
Local had finally dropped to just below 200 shortly after 0530. Due to the node crashes and the blob, many of our pilots had logged and taken the opportunity to get some much needed rest. Our gang had just over twenty people in it, but we had over a dozen T2 fitted battleships. The FIX FC in charge, Admentus Cor'vion, was in no mood to sit idle any longer.
Some of the enemy fleet was scattered or docked, but a very large chunk of them were taking down the shields on the outpost in an attempt to regain control of it. Around 0540, the McFIX fleet warped in and decided to send a message to AXE by calling them primary first. Steel Rat's Apocalypse and three more AXE battleships vanished, along with six other support ships. Our fleet warped out with no losses.
This pattern continued to repeat itself. As our pilots woke up and got in gang, our fleet continued to warp in again and again to whittle down the huge blob of ships outside the outpost. It didn't stop the enemy from taking the outpost back though...
-
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:28:00 -
[7]
Edited by: Seleene on 11/10/2006 17:29:38 This was the fight which the whole invasion had been building toward. We were outnumbered 2:1 in every ship category and TS was buzzing with barely restrained excitement. PvPers live for a battle like what was about to happen. I'd have loved to see the reaction of IAC as we warped in on their huge fleet but it never happened. "Warp in fifteen seconds."
No sooner had the words been spoken... and the node crashed. It was bound to happen, but our big fight had just been spoiled. We re-logged and started forming up again, hoping to salvage what still promised to be a fun evening. We then discovered a few shocking things:
Due to the node crash, the outpost we'd taken earlier in the day was now back in IAC hands! We could no longer dock at the station but we were still receiving money from sales tax, repair fees and such! Yet now, IAC could dock and undock at their leisure. WTF?? In light of all this, Local chat got a bit strange.
Fine, let's just kill them all.
We set up camp back at a gate and laid waste to another small fleet before yet another node drop!
A familiar site to all of EVE.
We all re-logged again, got loaded up and then proceeded to hit them outside the outpost, receiving very few losses and many kills. The night ended with seven total losses for MC (two battleships) and twelve FIX battleships down. In return, we'd taken out eighty-three enemy ships, including thirty-six battleships. Not bad for a day's work, but we still could not dock with the station we'd conquered just twelve hours earlier...
8 October - Welcome to the Twilight Zone
During the night, a number of very strange events took place. We'd had people online all night, constantly trying to harass and kill the enemy and doing a decent job of keeping them bottled up. However, a GM turned up to 'fix' the problems the system was having and what followed can best be described as weird and probably the most bizarre and disappointing move I have ever seen.
This allowed our opponents to stick up their hands and be teleported from the system they were camped in, their ships loaded with their hangers and everything. To make it worse we weren't allowed to try and prevent them from leaving! So now they were allowed to move freely out of the system? From a station they weren't even meant to have access to? Refit their ships even? And the GM warns of 'action' against us? Well, thanks, buddy for tossing our entire campaign strategy right out of the frakkin' window!
Apparently the best solution was to allow IAC to move their stuff out with complete impunity. At this point, an IAC member named Skully undocked in a hauler in front of our entire fleet and happily scooped up a few loot cans before re-docking at the station we apparently controled seeing as how I was still getting money from broker and repair fees.
The enemy had been almost completely bottled in the station since Friday, but all our efforts were for naught as in this time the GM supervised:
* The jumping out of 3 hostile dreads.
* The removal of their ships and kit from the station; they couldn't get through our gate camps so he kindly teleported them to F4R.
* The warning of one of our players due to breaking a ceasefire 2 minutes before he declared it.
* The collection of our cans by their haulers and then re-docking in the station.
* The removal of multiple BS from our station into their pos.
* The station remaining in their hands for over 12 hours until downtime with no effort to penalize those exploiting this.
Apparently this was a fair and unbiased solution. THANKS!  
-
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Hectic
Reikoku Band of Brothers
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:37:00 -
[8]
WOW, Awesome read! More of these please!
WELCOME BACK MGRL! |

R3dSh1ft
Caldari FIRMA Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:38:00 -
[9]
it was a lot of fun
hope to fight you again in the future :) fly safe. ______________________________________
|

Murukan
Minmatar The Priory Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:42:00 -
[10]
Was a very good read. On the GM part though gus preston was working in hand with the gm doing trial stuff so it was weird for iac too 
In rust we trust!!! |

Nez Perces
Amarr Black Spot.
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:43:00 -
[11]
Edited by: Nez Perces on 11/10/2006 17:45:55
Fantastic read Seleene.. Bravo.
Seems like the contract turned out to be a whole lot more than was bargained for....
Anyways.. another outstanding account of one of your campaigns.. ty. 
PS.. I was particularly impressed by how you had placeholders after posting each piece.. I read it as you posted the pre-written sections... 
|

Seleene
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:47:00 -
[12]
Originally by: Murukan Was a very good read. On the GM part though gus preston was working in hand with the gm doing trial stuff so it was weird for iac too 
I've no doubt that a LOT of what happened that morning was strange for EVERYONE, m8. Hence the 'Twillight Zone' reference.  -
Movie: 9UY - Got Fighters? |

Talthrus
Sharks With Frickin' Laser Beams Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:48:00 -
[13]
Awesome post Sel! \o/ ----------------------
|

Helplessandlost
Minmatar Convergent Firmus Ixion
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:48:00 -
[14]
/me salutes...
"Don't take life too seriously, nobody gets out alive!"
|

Major Stormer
Caldari Demon Womb Xelas Alliance
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:48:00 -
[15]
Very very very very GOOD READ.
I demand more. If you stop ill start sending you isk to write more! :P --------------------------
Above post is my opinion only and does not represent my corp/alliance. |

Mike Yagon
Minmatar The Nest Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:48:00 -
[16]
Hehe, this fight certainly has taught me a lot of things about life in 0.0. (I had only been in 0.0 for five days.) And although my wallet hates you guys, I thank you for the things this has taught me.
Hats off! 
------ In Carebear We Trust |

Rikeka
Amarr Eye of God Axiom Empire
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:48:00 -
[17]
Great read. 
|

Dortock
The Scarlet Harmonic
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:49:00 -
[18]
IAC is like ASCN in terms of k/d ratio?
Ah I get it! MC did attack ASCN all along!!! 
King Tinfoil Hatter |

Pandaaa
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:50:00 -
[19]
Edited by: Pandaaa on 11/10/2006 17:50:38 I HAVE A SLING !!
why isnt my corp showing D:
|

Murukan
Minmatar The Priory Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:51:00 -
[20]
Originally by: Pandaaa Edited by: Pandaaa on 11/10/2006 17:50:38 I HAVE A SLING !!
why isnt my corp showing D:
cause you're a noob!
In rust we trust!!! |

Raem Civrie
Umbra Congregatio Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:52:00 -
[21]
Edited by: Raem Civrie on 11/10/2006 17:53:08 God bless you Seleene. You have united us like no other.
Throughout this we were thoroughly impressed by MC's committment, and especially the initial blitzkrieg, but G7 is our home and always will be. We were one of the first small alliances to carve out a home in this way and nothing was going to take that away from us, and we are not alone as you have seen yourself.
In fact, the outpouring of support came as a pleasant surprise to many of us. I'll never forget the moment where our gang was moving to G7 from F4 on sunday night, and was greeted by the 80-something Goons sitting at the MB gate led in part by Tyrrax Thorrk, or the realization that at least half of our forces in G7 were non-IAC allies. CVA in particular honoured their friendship, along with Axiom who turned up in force as opposed to the few ships we had apparently been promised. To this day I have no idea where the Goons came from, that was apparently Tyrrax's doing.
As for GM interventions, they were... very strange, and lamentable even if in the end they favoured us. However, I do think you overestimated the effect of taking the Distillery; many of our members, their primary ships locked from them in the station, ran into Empire and fetched new combat ships, be it battleships, cruisers or frigates. The F4 outpost of course helped enormously in this regard, and it would've been harder for us to operate out of Litom than F4.
It's not over though, more people are joining the party, and I suspect IAC will not rest until our space is safe enough for us to reopen it to passing neutrals.
----
All you do is bark, you never meow. |

Hakera
Anari Higard
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:56:00 -
[22]
Edited by: Hakera on 11/10/2006 17:56:42 Excellent read yet again - lets hope between you & and the others, you set a trend and standard for battle/war reporting from now on :)
Kudos to both sides for slogging it out under such horrible server stability.
|

Swor
Sniggerdly
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:57:00 -
[23]
it was definitely interesting being shot at be friendlies more than hostiles heheh
its too bad the node couldn't support a real fight that sunday
a good fight all around, even if we did have more than 1/2 of our "allied" fleet itching to kill us  
|

Murukan
Minmatar The Priory Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:58:00 -
[24]
Originally by: Swor it was definitely interesting being shot at be friendlies more than hostiles heheh
its too bad the node couldn't support a real fight that sunday
a good fight all around, even if we did have more than 1/2 of our "allied" fleet itching to kill us  
eh it was rather odd waking up and seeing alliance chat. It's like wait haven't we been shooting these guys since we first met 
In rust we trust!!! |

Raem Civrie
Umbra Congregatio Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 17:59:00 -
[25]
Originally by: Murukan
Originally by: Swor it was definitely interesting being shot at be friendlies more than hostiles heheh
its too bad the node couldn't support a real fight that sunday
a good fight all around, even if we did have more than 1/2 of our "allied" fleet itching to kill us  
eh it was rather odd waking up and seeing alliance chat. It's like wait haven't we been shooting these guys since we first met 
It's been a learning experience for all of us.
----
All you do is bark, you never meow. |

jbob2000
Gallente The Taining corp Knights Of the Southerncross
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 18:01:00 -
[26]
If what you say about the GMs actions are true, then that is total BS! I hope you have some kind of active petition about that issue, because in my opinion and based on what you've said, that shouldn't have happened.
|

Grimster
Body Count Inc. Mercenary Coalition
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 18:01:00 -
[27]
Another brilliant writeup boss.
Now... what's next? 
|

Charlie Crocodile
Eldritch Storm
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 18:01:00 -
[28]
Best thread I've read in a long time!
CC
|

maGz
The Priory Interstellar Alcohol Conglomerate
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 18:03:00 -
[29]
Nice read mate...
Too bad you're leaving already  ____________
The Priory Killboard |

SATAN
BURN EDEN
|
Posted - 2006.10.11 18:08:00 -
[30]
I have to say that taking advantage of friendly standings to plan and impliment your invasion is severly cheap. You should have made sure that as soon as your contract was over that they set their standings to at least neutral.
Does this post mean you are leaving IAC space?
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