War Rules
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Main • FAQ • War Rules (Draft)
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War on CinderCivs utilizes a special set of rules as to allow for a dynamic progression that corresponds to roleplay and fair combat. The war system is designed to emulate a strategy game layout with arranged battles happening over tiles of various levels of development.
Declaring War
Wars are declared between nations with at least one urban tile under their control. A declaration of war must be made in a manner that is consistent with prior roleplay—metagaming or failRP justifications are not permitted.
Upon declaring war, the attacking nation must provide the following:
- The general area they intend to attack (e.g. a region or town).
- A tilemap clearly showing their current territories relevant for the war.
The area declared to be under attack go from Controlled to Contested.
Once war is declared, the defending nation is expected to submit their own tilemap and acknowledge the contested area within one week. If neither side submits the required information within this timeframe, the war is automatically cancelled.
If only one side complies, and the other fails or refuses to submit the required tilemap or contested zone, the staff team may intervene and force a battle to occur to the compliant party’s advantage.
Tiles and Tilemaps
The entire field of war is divided into distinct tiles. Tiles vary based on their status and their level of development.
Tile Status
- Controlled – The default state of a tile where no war actions have taken place; all is fair, anything may be built.
- Contested – A battle is declared over such tile. Only minor alterations (such as decorations) and specific defenses (e.g. trench lines, campsites as acknowledged by the war monitor) are allowed.
- Occupied – A contested tile that has switched ownership. After 7 days in this state, the tile automatically reverts to Controlled.
- Mixed – Occurs when a draw happens; the war monitor subdivides the tile into occupied sub-tiles in accordance with the sides involved.
Tile Development
Tiles are also classified by their development level:
- Fort – An urban tile fortified with walls and redstone gates as defined entrances.
- Urban – Major cities, large towns, or city districts.
- Suburban – Outskirts of cities, villages, or areas with moderate development.
- Rural – Areas between tiles, with minimal development.
Additional Rules
- Every participant must start in the urban tiles they control. Non-members of nations at war must also start in their own urban tiles; if none exist, they are disqualified from participating in the war until they acquire one.
- Forts can be breached by declaring a separate battle over the entrance. Note that such a battle does not result in any territorial gain.
- Forts must be opened before they can be used as spawn tiles for an attack during the battle.
- Rural tiles can be attacked unless they border a fort.
- Tiles can be upgraded by one development level per war, but they cannot be upgraded into forts.
- Tiles with redstone entrances that do not qualify as forts cannot be locked during battle, with exceptions dictated by the war monitor.
- No new tiles can be created during the war, nor can any existing tiles outside of the submitted tilemaps be added after tilemaps are verified.
- Tiles cannot feature excessively punishing defenses that waste player time or force impractical movement (e.g. requiring players to crouch or crawl to enter).
Organizing the War
Every battle on the server must occur at a time either:
- Agreed upon by both sides of the war, or
- Appointed by staff if no agreement can be reached.
The first battle of the war must take place within 10 days of the war declaration, and subsequent battles must take place no later than 10 days after. Purposefully delaying battles or neglecting to respond to scheduling attempts may result in disqualification from the war.
War Monitors
Each war must have at least one war monitor. This individual may be:
- Appointed by mutual agreement between all warring sides, or
- Assigned by staff if no consensus is reached.
The war monitor's responsibilities include:
- Ruling on disputes and edge cases during the war.
- Spectating battles to ensure fair play.
- Disqualifying players who violate war rules.
- Officially starting and ending each battle.
Fighter lists
All participating factions must privately send a list of their fighters to the war monitor before the battle begins. This list must remain consistent unless a player is permanently removed or replaced with permission from the monitor.