They can place economic spies in your provinces, and each day, at day change, they will have a chance to cause damage. As you have mentioned, you can also use gold to use this feature, much faster, and to a larger extent, meaning its instant, and guaranteed to drop the morale of the province by 10%. As far as your morale province to continue to drop, can you see in the news paper that it is continually being hit with spies? The effects will last until day change of an espionage of your opponent.
Use of gold to decrease enemy province morale
Hi.
I am in the fourth week of my second Call of War game. I've done well; I won my first game, and I have a significant lead and a solid ally after 26 days in the second. That said, I have not made extensive use of the espionage functions except to recruit counter-espionage spies in the final week of my first game. In my current round, I have several non-core provinces whose morale has decreased inexplicably and whose morale has not recovered despite being at peace for two days. Is there any way to discern which provinces have had their morale decreased by the espionage of an opponent? When an opponent uses gold to decrease the morale of a province, how long does the effect last? Are there more extensive instructions for the various espionage functions provided somewhere?
I would be grateful for the input of experienced game players.
3 Replies
Very good explanation.Squirrel Warrior wrote:
They can place economic spies in your provinces, and each day, at day change, they will have a chance to cause damage. As you have mentioned, you can also use gold to use this feature, much faster, and to a larger extent, meaning its instant, and guaranteed to drop the morale of the province by 10%. As far as your morale province to continue to drop, can you see in the news paper that it is continually being hit with spies? The effects will last until day change of an espionage of your opponent.
Question answered by @Squirrel Warrior
"I came, I saw, I conquered" Written in a report to Rome 47 B.C., after conquering Pharnaces at Zela in Asia Minor in just five days; as quoted in Life of Caesar by Plutarch; reported to have been inscribed on one of the decorated wagons in the Pontic triumph, in Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius, by Suetonius.
"Alea iacta est" Gaius Julius Caesar.