Arvessa & Isendra
Have you ever thought about how a simulation could test alliance negotiations while still keeping the risk high enough to feel real?
Sure, give each side a high‑stakes objective and a secret card that can flip the game. If one ally pulls a fast one the whole plan falls apart, so you feel the real pressure but still practice the dance of negotiation. The trick is to keep the stakes alive while letting the players feel they have room to manoeuvre.
That’s exactly the balance we need—tight enough to force decisions, loose enough to keep options open. Put a “black‑mail” card in each deck, only usable when the other side is on the brink of collapse. It forces them to weigh the cost of a single move against the long‑term partnership. The trick is to let them feel the power to choose, while the clock counts down, so every negotiation becomes a calculated gamble.
Nice—keeps them on their toes. Just watch the clock so the bluff doesn’t turn into a waiting game. It’s all about the pressure point.
Exactly, the ticking clock is the true test—too slow and you risk stalling, too fast and you give no breathing room. It’s a delicate rhythm that keeps everyone playing their cards.