What is Diplomacy?

Dip
My Diplomacy Page
zine
My Zine GAME
Internet Explorer
LSpace Now
dipnow
The Diplomat
The Dip Pouch
UKGPB Entry form
UK Games Players

Diplomacy is a board game based roughly on the political situation in Europe at the start of the twentieth century. The board is divided up into provinces for the seven powers of Austria, England, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, and Turkey. The players start off with a number of units (fleets and armies), equivalent to the number of supply centres they control, and try to control over half the centres on the board (18 of the 34), when they are declared the winner.
The game is designed so that any one player can not do this alone but has to negotiate with other players to ally against the others. All players take their moves simultaneously (by submitting orders for their units, eg writing them down). These factors mean players will initially ally trying to destroy an opponent whilst ensuring their ally does not get too big to be a threat. A major tactic is "backstabbing", where one player will promise to move in a set way, but will actually order a different set of moves. This is usually when he wants to stab an ally to take his supply centres. The game is a very good way to release those deceitful and megalomanic urges that are unwelcome in the real world.

The game started forming in the mid 1950's, being published by the author Allan Calhamer in 1958, and then by different games companies until its current owner Avalon Hill. Soon after its initial release it was seen as a game that could very easily be played postally, since all orders were simultaneous. So the 1960's and onwards saw the development of postal play and amateur magazines dedicated to postal play. The 1990's have opened up a new medium for playing Diplomacy, that of the Internet and email. There is adjudication software sitting on several machines, often referred to as "judges" that allow people world wide to play the game by registering players, processing orders, adjudicating, and emailing the results to the players in a game. For more information see my diplomacy page.

Enter your Internet e-mail address to receive e-mail when this page is updated:

Netscape Now!
Download Netscape
Nic Chilton. [email protected] � 1997