"I wish my little brother would get better, but not even the priests can heal him and my inheritance is running out." (plot-block)
Bereaved girl: "You stupid gods only ever make things worse! He was already sick before and now he's only getting worse! I hate you all! Get ooout! Get out!"
She was praying either to me - a god - or the council - a bunch of gods. Why would she then get angry at the gods when one of them directly appears in front of her to try and help?
That would be because I overcomplicated the subplot by not just revealing the conclusion a sentence later, and now I end up having to flesh out nigh-implausible details (choo choo!) that didn't really exist until they were actually observed. (Note that it's not actually my own subplot completely)
Army purchases: Buying your war stuff and units. I think it's now sufficiently balanced, but I'll have to check each price again.
So are we able to do that yet? I don't know how to do that.
EDIT: The Sign Out button doesn't work on the Keshan Warzone web page.
I'll get around to that, but it seems to be a problem with the cookies being registered to the /private subdirectory and having the link appear in the navbar, which is under / . Once that's all done, I'll make a little form for sending purchase and movement orders.
Since I also realized that editing maps in GIMP for more than an hour everyday will not be terribly efficient, I think I will go ahead and implement the HTML5 canvas stuff. The code may resemble a thin, extruded pasta, but then, I'll only need a few minutes each day to post updates. Fortunately, this week-end marks the end of the non-programming-related midterms. The main question is one of
whether anyone still wants to go to war after possible interest decline over a week.
There is also the question of whether people opposing a proposal should have creative control of the results. Myself, I think only supporters, abstainers, and no-voters should actually be allowed, but the current system allows anyone to have creative control regardless of voting. This may result in spite creations if, for example, an opposer decided to fill up most of a proposal creation quota with something no one else wants.