And the third ticket is still "waiting" for a reply, created in 2008. Two of them went off topic since they obviously didn't have an idea what the hell I was talking about, and circled around the actual question. :)Īnd 3 out of the 4 tickets that have I submitted so far aren't solved still. A friend of mine was replied to 2 years after submitting the ticket. ) It depends on who you start talking to, if they actually reply to you. I can name you a few friends that would tell you otherwise. I just really dislike Steam when it comes to customer support :\ I registered a new account on the email address and now have two accounts with the same email address and same name (+/- an _ ). I'm still trying to get them to merge two accounts (and yes I know they won't do it) because their system told me I didn't have an account registered on the email address I had. It's gotten tons better over time, but they really couldn't give two flying ****s about their customers. Luckily consumer protection laws in Australia are quite comprehensive. I have about 30 titles with Steam, every time something has gone wrong, they have tried to give me the run around. We released the hold and everything went fine. Steam contacted us within a week in response to our email notifying them of our hold and refunded the value. They told him that if he did they would ban his account.Īt this point we contacted AMEX and had them place a hold on the 15 or so payments we had made in the previous month. My brother (15 and the owner of the account) called horse **** and told them that if they refused to reverse the payment he would exercise his statutory rights (that is to say, issue a charge back). They argued for 2 months that we had the game, so we weren't entitled to a refund DESPITE being billed twice (we only wanted one payment refunded). We thought the payment had failed entirely, so we tried with a new card and got the game put on. It turned out that their game system identified the card as "unacceptable" for whatever reason, but PayPal with drew the money. Fun, quick, easy to learn, it's got it all.Steam's payment system with PayPal ****ed up and billed a credit card without giving the game to the account.
![abandonware games politics abandonware games politics](https://tagz.eu/download/games/screens/mission-critical/10.jpg)
Increasing it too much can cause problems, so be careful!Īll in all, I rate this game a 5. I usually allow the Palestinian homeland, but ignore their wanting to stop my army's growth.Īt the end of the year, you either have the option to increase your defense budget, leave it the same, or decrease it. usually wants you to either stop increasing the size of your army for two years or make a homeland for Palestinians. Usually for me, things are okay and I never need to post a brigade, but every once in awhile I need my police to go in and knock some heads around.Įvery year at around July, a summit is called, and if you go to it, the U.S. You can fund Israel's nuclear program (which is actually a good idea) and also take care of problems with the Palestinians. You can take strategic actions against your neighbors such as posting troops on their adjacent borders, making tactical air strikes, and invading. On top of either becoming friends or enemies with your surrounding countries, you have options such as buying weapons and such from France, the U.S., Britain, or the Black Market. Ending up going to war with either Syria or Egypt when you aren't ready happens quite often, or one of the nations will acquire nuclear technology before you do and nuke you. Yes, the way to win the game is by being the last stable country in the Middle East. The only way to get rid of countries like Libya, Iraq, and Iran, is to support insurgents. I once won an entire game by using this tactic. The only ways I found to beat them are either an extremely lucky sneak attack, attacking them while they are at war with Libya, or taking them out by supporting insurgents in their country.
![abandonware games politics abandonware games politics](https://tagz.eu/download/games/screens/reign-conflict-of-nations/3.jpg)
They have a superior military, air force, and resources. Syria is a challenge, but can still be beaten, especially if you build up forces on the border quickly and invade. Jordan usually takes about two to three months to conquer. Lebanon is easy since you can usually win a war with them within a single month if you have a lot of tanks and air forces. You can only go to war with the countries neighboring Israel.
![abandonware games politics abandonware games politics](https://www.fudzilla.com/media/k2/items/cache/d439be88480eadec1f4d889fd324b663_XL.jpg)
The countries of Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Iran, should be your top priorities. You don't need to worry about Lebanon or Jordan. Put into the role of the new Israeli Prime Minister in January 1997 just after the previous one was assassinated, you are thrust into the corrupt world of fantasy Middle Eastern politics.Īs Prime Minister (PM), you need to make diplomatic relations with your neighbors either for better or worse, whichever suits you, and make sure you stay on top at all times. Let me first say, this game is pretty cool.