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Post by England on Dec 24, 2010 23:15:40 GMT -8
Nations are given the option of sending some sort of message to others, though there is no way to make sure that the recipient, whoever it may be, will receive the message. You may send write a letter, slip it into a bottle, and throw it out into the sea in hopes that the waves will carry it to another nation, or maybe even attach it to the leg of a bird to fly free. In the end, the method of delivery is left to the sender.
However, there is a large chance that the message will either reach the wrong nation (should you have a certain recipient in mind), or will not reach him or her at all. To determine whether or not a message was successfully received, two things will happen.
First, there will be a coin toss. If it lands on heads, then the message will have reached a nation successfully. If it is tails, then it will have been lost during the delivery process, or a citizen might have gotten it and thrown it away.
Afterward, to determine who gets the message, a randomizer will be used with the names of all the possible recipients inputted. (So, for example, you should not expect Austria to receive a letter from England, as Austria is a landlocked country.)
Nations can send as many letters (or even items, if they can figure out a method to send them) as they want, given that they can find the materials necessary to write.
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