Diplomacy (game)

Diplomacy (game)
Diplomacy
Designer(s) Allan B. Calhamer
Publication date 1959
Players 7
Age range 12+
Setup time 5–10 minutes
Playing time 4–12 hours
Random chance None
Skill(s) required Tactics
Strategy
Psychology
Negotiation

Diplomacy is a strategic board game created by Allan B. Calhamer in 1954 and released commercially in 1959.[1] Its main distinctions from most board wargames are its negotiation phases (players spend much of their time forming and betraying alliances with other players and forming beneficial strategies)[2] and the absence of dice or other game elements that produce random effects. Set in Europe just before the beginning of World War I, Diplomacy is played by two to seven players, each controlling the armed forces of a major European Power (or, with few players, multiple powers). Each player aims to move his or her few starting units—and defeat those of others—to win possession of a majority of strategic cities and provinces marked as "supply centers" on the map; these supply centers allow players who control them to produce more units.

Diplomacy was the first commercially published game to be played by mail (PBM); only chess, which is in the public domain, saw significant postal (long distance) play earlier. Diplomacy was also the first commercially published game to generate an active hobby with amateur fanzines; only science-fiction/fantasy and comics fandom saw fanzines earlier. Competitive face-to-face (FtF) Diplomacy tournaments have been held since the 1970s. Play of Diplomacy by e-mail (PBEM) has been widespread since the late 1980s.[3]

Diplomacy has been published in the United States by Games Research, Avalon Hill, and Hasbro; the name is currently a registered trademark of Hasbro's Avalon Hill division. Diplomacy has also been licensed to various companies for publication in other countries. Diplomacy is also played on the Internet, adjudicated by computer and/or a human gamemaster.

In its catalog, Avalon Hill advertised Diplomacy as John F. Kennedy's[4] and Henry Kissinger's favorite game. Kissinger described it as his favorite in an interview published in a games magazine.[5] American broadcast journalist Walter Cronkite was also reported to be a fan of the game.[6]

Contents

History

The idea for Diplomacy arose from Allan B. Calhamer's study at Harvard of nineteenth-century European history under Sidney B. Fay inter alia, and from his study of political geography.[2] The rough form of Diplomacy was created in 1954, and its details were developed through playtesting until the 1958 map and rules revisions. Calhamer paid for a 500-game print run of that version in 1959 after rejection by major companies.[1] It has been published since then by Games Research (in 1961, then a 1971 edition with a revised Rulebook), Avalon Hill (in 1976), by Hasbro's Avalon Hill division (in 1999), and now by Wizards of the Coast (in 2008) in the USA, and licensed to other boardgame publishers for versions sold in other countries. Among these are Parker Brothers, Waddingtons Games, Gibsons Games, Asmodée Editions, and several others.[7]

Basic setting and overview

The board is a map of Europe plus portions of the Middle East and North Africa. It is divided into fifty-six land regions and nineteen sea regions. Forty-two of the land regions are divided among the seven Great Powers of the game: Austria-Hungary, England, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, and Turkey. The remaining fourteen land regions are neutral at the start of the game.

Thirty-four of the land regions contain supply centers, corresponding to major centers of government, industry or commerce (e.g. Vienna, Rome); twenty-two of these are located within the Great Powers, and are referred to as home supply centers. The remaining twelve are located in provinces which are neutral at the start of the game. The number of supply centers (SCs) a player controls determines the total number of armies and fleets a player may have on the board, and as players gain and lose control of different centers, they may build (raise), or must remove (disband) units accordingly.

A Diplomacy board, showing the different land and sea territories, starting borders, and the location of supply centers.

The land provinces within the Great Powers which contain supply centres are generally named after a major city in the province (e.g. London, Moscow) while the other land provinces within the Great Powers are generally named after a region (e.g. Bohemia, Apulia). Neutral land provinces are generally named after countries (e.g. Serbia, Belgium). Finland and Syria are both parts of Great Powers as Finland was part of the Russian empire in 1914 and Syria was part of the Turkish empire in 1914. Tunis is used rather than Tunisia on most boards and North Africa is a single province covering parts of Algeria and Morocco. Although for game purposes, the game starts in 1901, the map generally reflects the political boundaries of Europe in 1914 just before the outbreak of WWI, with Bosnia already annexed to the Austrian empire, and the Balkans reflecting the results of the wars of 1912 and 1913 in that region. On the other hand, North Africa and Tunis start the game as neutral, despite these regions being part of the French colonial empire in 1914.

All players other than England and Russia begin the game with two armies and one naval fleet; England starts with two fleets and one army, and Russia starts with two armies and two fleets (making it the only player to start the game with more than three units). Only one unit at a time may occupy a given map region. Balancing units to supply center counts is done after each game-year (two seasons of play: Spring and Autumn). At the beginning of the game, the twelve neutral SCs are all typically captured within the first few moves. Further acquisition of supply centers becomes a zero sum dynamic with any gains in a player's resources coming at the expense of a rival.

Comparison with other war games

Diplomacy differs from the majority of war games in several ways:

  • Unit movement is simultaneous, not turn-based — all players secretly write down their moves after a negotiation period, and then all moves are revealed and put into effect simultaneously.
  • Social interaction and interpersonal skills make up an essential part of the game's play.
  • The rules that simulate combat are strategic, abstract, and simple—not tactical, realistic, or complex—as this is a diplomatic simulation game, not a military one.
  • Combat resolution contains no element of randomness — no dice are rolled, no cards are drawn.
  • The game is especially well suited to postal play,[2] which led to an active hobby of amateur publishing.
  • Internet Diplomacy shows that this is one of those few early board games that are now played on the web.

Game play

Diplomacy proceeds by seasons, beginning in the year 1901, with each year divided into two main seasons: the "Spring" and "Autumn/Fall" moves. Each season is further divided into negotiation and movement phases, followed by 'retreat' or 'disband' adjustments and an end-of-the-year Winter phase of new builds or removals following the Autumn adjustments.

Negotiation phase

In the negotiation phase, players use any verbal means necessary amongst each other to form alliances, or some other form of arrangement, with one another. Such arrangements may be made public knowledge or kept secret. Since players are not bound to anything they say during this period, and thus no agreements of any sort are enforceable, communication and trust are unusually important for a strategy game; players must forge alliances with opponents and observe them to ensure their trustworthiness; at the same time, they must convince others of their own trustworthiness while making plans to turn on their allies when others least expect it. A well-timed stab can be just as profitable as a long and trustworthy alliance.

Movement phase

After the negotiation period, players write secret orders for each unit; these orders are revealed and executed simultaneously. Units can move from their location to an adjacent space, support adjacent units in holding an area in the event of an attack, do nothing or assist in attacking an occupied area. In addition, fleets may transport armies from one coast space to another when in a chain called a "convoy". Armies may only occupy land regions, and fleets occupy sea regions and the land regions that border named seas. Only one unit may occupy a region; if multiple units are ordered to move to the same region, only the unit with the most support moves there (if two or more units have the same highest support, no units ordered to that region move). A unit giving support that is attacked has its support broken, except in the case the support is being given to an invasion of the region from which the attack it suffered comes.

During an attack, the greatest concentration of force is always victorious; if the forces are equal, a standoff results and the units remain in their original positions. If a supporting unit is attacked (except by the unit against which the support is directed), its support is nullified, which allows units to affect the outcome of conflicts in regions not directly adjacent.

End-of-year and supply centers

After each Autumn move, newly-acquired supply centers become owned by the occupying player, and each power's supply center total is recalculated; players with fewer supply centers than units on the board must disband units, while players with more supply centers than units on the board are entitled to build units in their Home centers (supply centers controlled at the start of the game). Players controlling no supply centers are eliminated from the game, and if a player controls 18 or more (that is, more than half) of the 34 SCs, that person is declared the winner. Players may also agree to a draw; this also happens when (infrequent) stalemates occur.

Variants

Several boardgames based on Diplomacy have been commercially published. Additionally, many fans of the game have created hundreds of variants of their own, using altered rules on the standard map, standard rules on a different map, or both. An index of over a thousand variants is available at the Diplomacy Variant Bank web site. Another notable source of variant maps and Realpolitik files is located at DipWiki (see External links, below).

Rulebook provision for fewer than seven players

The rules allow for games with two to seven players, closing parts of the standard board, but these are used only in casual play, and are not considered standard Diplomacy in tournament, postal, or most forms of online play. For example, if there are six players, everyone plays one country and Italy is not used; for five players, Italy and Germany are not used. The original rules did not include additional guidelines, but the Avalon Hill set included suggestions, such as individual players using multiple countries, and additions.

Another approach to solving the problem of fewer than seven players is the use of the Escalation Variant Rules by Edi Birsan:

  1. Players start with no pieces on the board
  2. Players put one piece down on the board in any province one at a time (starting with the youngest player)
  3. After reaching the maximum number of pieces the players start the game with ownership of their starting provinces.
  4. At the end of Autumn 1901 with their adjustments players write down their three HOME centers for the rest of the game.

This is done without negotiations and may result in two players declaring the same province. However in order to build there they still must own it and the province must be open. Players may choose any supply center as a HOME for example: EDI, DEN, ROM

It is suggested that for the number players the following starting pieces are used:

  • Two – 12 units
  • Three- 8 units
  • Four −6 units
  • Five- 5 units
  • Six – 4 units

It is also suggested that for games with 2–3–4 players that the 'Gunboat' rule applies which means that there are no discussions.

For 4 or 5 players the 'Wilson' Rule applies which means that all discussions must take place in the open at the table with no whispers or secret signals.

For 5 or 6 players regular negotiation rules apply.

The following are the current official suggestions:

Alternative way to play

The following is an alternative way to play the game of Diplomacy when fewer than seven players are present.

Six Players: Eliminate Italy. Italian units hold in position and defend themselves, but don’t support each other. Units belonging to any of the players can support them in their holding position. If Italian units are forced to retreat, they’re disbanded.

Five Players: Eliminate Italy and Germany (as described for Italy above).

Four Players: One player plays England, and the other three play the following pairs: Austria/France, Germany/Turkey, and Italy/Russia.

Three Players: One player controls England/Germany/Austria; the second, Russia/Italy; and the third, France/Turkey.

Two Players: This version can be played as a World War I simulation. One player controls England/France/Russia while the other plays Austria/Germany/Turkey. Italy is neutral and Italian territory can’t be entered. The game begins in 1914. Before the Autumn 1914 adjustments, flip a coin. Italy joins the winner of the toss in Spring 1915. The first player to control 24 supply centers wins. This is also a way for two new players to learn the rules.

In games for 2, 3, or 4 players, supply-center ownership is computed for each individual country, even though the same person plays more than one country. As with the regular rules, adjustments must be made by each country in accordance with its supply-center holdings.

Commercially published Diplomacy variants

There have been six commercially released variants of DiplomacyMachiavelli, Kamakura, Colonial Diplomacy, Hundred, Ard-Rí and Classical. Imperial is a boardgame with enough similarities to be described as a Diplomacy variant by some.

Machiavelli

Main article: Machiavelli (board game)

Machiavelli was published by Battleline Publications, later taken over by Avalon Hill. Set in Renaissance Italy, the board is controlled by the Republic of Florence, the Republic of Venice, the Duchy of Milan, the Kingdom of Naples, the Papacy, Valois France, Habsburg Austria, and the Ottoman Turks. The game introduces many rules changes such as money, bribery, three seasons per year, garrisons, and random events such as plague and famine. It features scenarios tailored for as few as four and as many as eight players.

Kamakura

Kamakura was published by West End Games in the early 1980s. Its setting is feudal Japan.

Colonial Diplomacy

Set in Asia in the late 19th century, much of the board is controlled by various colonial powers: England, Russia, Japan, Holland, Turkey, China, and France. The game introduces three special features:

  • The Trans-Siberian railroad extends across Russia from Moscow to Vladivostok. The railroad can be used by Russia to move armies anywhere along the railroad. The TSR may only be used by Russia. Russian armies are allowed to move through other Russian armies, but foreign armies can block the passage of armies on the TSR.
  • The Suez Canal is the only way to move between the Red Sea and Mediterranean Sea. Use of the Suez Canal is controlled by whoever is in control of Egypt. The use of the Suez Canal increases in importance later in the game as expansion becomes both more important and more difficult.
  • The ownership of Hong Kong counts as a supply center for any country except China.

This map was used as the basis of the Imperial Asia expansion map.[8]

Hundred

Hundred is a map by Andy D. Schwarz based on the Hundred Years' War created in 1996 and published by Stupendous Games in 2000.[9]

Ard-Rí

Ard-Rí is a map by Stuart John Bernard based on medieval Ireland, created in 1998, and published by Stupendous Games in 2000.[10]

Classical

Classical is a map by Andy D. Schwarz and Vincent Mous based on the ancient world after the death of Alexander the Great, created in 1998, and published by Stupendous Games in 2000.[11]

Diplomacy variants not commercially published

Youngstown Diplomacy

An extension of the normal map, including Asia and colonies there. For example, in addition to the usual home centers, France starts with a fleet in Saigon (in Cochinchina). Some countries didn't have colonies in Asia, so they were given more home centers (e.g. Posen, next to Berlin). Also, three new Powers were added – India, China, and Japan. Named after the city of Youngstown, Ohio where the variant was invented.[12]

Ancient Med

A historical map transplant of the standard Diplomacy game and rules to the Mediterranean Sea region in classical times. Players assume control of Carthage, Rome, Egypt, Greece, and Persia in this five player variant. Ancient Med is widely considered to be a very balanced variant, offering roughly equal chances for victory to any of the five powers on the map. It has been extensively play tested and revised, culminating in version 9 which was coded and included with the Realpolitik adjudicator program.

Fleet Rome

One of the most popular diplomacy variants is arguably also the simplest. "Fleet Rome" is a simple standard map variant in which Italy begins with a fleet instead of an army in Rome.[13]

Renaissance Diplomacy

A standard map variant that includes a passable Switzerland and alternate borders and starting units for the great powers. It begins at the dawn of the Renaissance in Europe: the year after the fall of Constantinople (1454). Unlike standard diplomacy, conflict between the great powers tends to arise earlier rather than later, making for a very interesting opening few seasons.[14][15]

Intimate Diplomacy

A variant for two players in which opponents bid for control of the other five mercenary countries[16][17]

Tournaments

Diplomacy is played at a number of formal tournaments in many nations. Most face-to-face Diplomacy tournaments longer than one day are associated with either a Diplomacy-centered convention (such as DipCon or Dixiecon) or a large multi-game convention (such as the Origins Game Fair or the World Boardgaming Championships). Some conventions are centered on the games and have a highly competitive atmosphere; others have more focus on meeting and socializing with other players from the postal or e-mail parts of the hobby.

Tournament play

In some tournaments, each game ends after a specified number of game-years, to ensure that all players can play in all rounds without limiting the tournament structure to one round per day. At other events, a game continues until a winner is determined or a draw is voted. Tournaments in Europe are generally played with a specific end year whereas tournaments in North America more often are played until someone wins or a draw is agreed.

Major championship tournaments

The World Diplomacy Convention (WDC or World DipCon) is held annually in different places in the world. The winner of WDC is considered to be the World Champion of Diplomacy. WDC was first held in 1988 in Birmingham, England, and was held at two-year intervals before becoming an annual event. WDC's site moves among four regions: North America, Europe, Australasia, and the rest of the world, with a requirement that successive WDC's are always held in different regions.[18]

The North American Diplomacy Convention (DipCon) is held annually in different places in North America, to determine the North American Champion of Diplomacy. DipCon was first held in 1966 in Youngstown, Ohio.[19] DipCon's site rotates among West, Central, and East regions.[20]

The European Diplomacy Convention (Euro DipCon) is held annually in different places in Europe, to determine the European Champion of Diplomacy.

Over a dozen other countries hold face-to-face national championship tournaments[21]

Other major face-to-face tournaments

Many of the larger multi-game conventions, such as the World Boardgaming Championships, Gen Con, Origins, ManorCon, TempleCon, and Dragonflight also host Diplomacy tournaments. On occasion, WDC or DipCon will be held in conjunction with one of these conventions.

In addition, many of the larger local and regional clubs host tournaments on an annual basis and always encourage visitors from the local area as well as any travelers from around the globe. For example, the Chicago area Diplomacy club, the Windy City Weasels, hosts two tournaments annually: one at the CODCon gaming convention at the College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, IL, and also, their annual club tournament called Weasel Moot, hosted in August/September of each year. To date they've had many visitors from both coasts and Europe in attendance.

The Potomac Tea & Knife Society, home of Diplomacy in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, hosts their annual Tempest in a Teapot tournament in October each year.

Major play-by-email tournaments

The play-by-email field is constantly changing. There are numerous tournaments generally associated with different websites. As of 2008 there were no official events sanctioned by the manufacturer (Wizards/Avalon Hill). There have been and continue to be events with various sizes and self designated titles such as:

  • World Masters – every two years in the Worldmasters E-mail Tournament composed of both team and individual events
  • Diplomacy World Cup – modeled after a Soccer World Cup (players are in teams competing by countries), started in 2007 and ended in 2009 (first edition) and is due to start in September 2010 (second edition).
  • Winter Blitz – The 4th Annual Winter Blitzis became open to join in 2011.

Other ways to play

Despite the length of face-to-face Diplomacy games, there are people who organize ad-hoc games, and there are also various clubs that have annual tournaments and monthly club games.

To overcome the difficulty of assembling enough players for a sufficiently large block of time together, a play-by-mail game community has developed, either via Postal or Internet Diplomacy, using either humans to adjudicate the turns or automatic adjudicators.

Postal play and postal hobby

Since the 1960s, Diplomacy has been played by mail through fanzines. The play-by-mail hobby was created in 1963 in carbon-copied typed flyers by John Boardman in New York, recruiting players through his science fiction fanzine Knowable. His flyers became an ongoing publication under the Graustark title, and led directly to the formation of other zines. By May 1965 there were eight Diplomacy zines.[22] By the end of 1967 there were dozens of zines in the USA, and by 1970 their editors were holding gatherings. In 1969, Don Turnbull started the first UK-based Diplomacy zine, Albion.[23] By 1972, both the USA and UK hobbies were forming organizations. In the 1980s, there were over sixty zines in the main list of the North American Zine Poll, peaking at 72 zines in 1989;[24] and there were nearly as many in the major Zine Poll of the British part of the hobby. In the 1990s and 2000s, the number of postal Diplomacy zines has reduced as new players instead joined the part of the hobby that plays over the internet via e-mail or on websites. In April 2010, Graustark itself ceased publication. As of 2011, there are only a few active postal zines published in the USA, one each in Canada and Australia, and several in the UK and elsewhere. In order to reduce postage nad printing costs, as well as for environmental reasons, several zines (e.g. 'Western Front', 'Maniacs Paradise' ) are distributed to subscribers via emailed links to the zine's web page when a new issue appears, or are emailed out as pdf files, for subscribers to read on screen, or print out as they choose. Some zines maintain a dual existence as paper and digital publications.


Play online

PLAYdiplomacy.com interactive point-and-click interface

Diplomacy has been played through e-mail on the Internet since the 1983 debut of The Armchair Diplomat on Compuserve.[22] From 1986–1990, Peter Szymonik started and moderated dozens of simulateneously running Online Diplomacy games on the GEnie Network with hundreds of players worldwide. This later included the first online Colonia variant games and later branched into and gave birth to Jim Dunngan's related Hundred Years War Online multiplayer wargame. Adjudication by computer started in 1988. A multitude of play-by-email (PBEM) communities and online tournaments were developed over the coming years, and recent online Diplomacy sites also allow entirely web-based games of Diplomacy. Online diplomacy is now also available on the popular social networking site Facebook.

In addition to e-mail and web-adjudicated games, numerous variations – ranging from player numbers and slight differences (such as placing an extra Italian fleet in Rome) to entirely fictitious maps set in worlds from pop-culture exist, played with either messaging servers or forums, often hosted by the diplomacy sites themselves.[25]

Diplomacy computer games

Screenshot from the Paradox computer game.

Avalon Hill released a computer game version of Diplomacy in 1984–1985 for the IBM PC.

Hasbro released a computer game version of Diplomacy in 1999. A major fault was that the computer AI was considered poor, one reviewer remarking "Gamers of any skill level will have no trouble whatsoever whaling on the computer at even the highest difficulty setting."[8].

Paradox Interactive released a new computer version in 2005, which was given negative reviews.[26][27][28] None of the computer games supported voice chat, which limited the possibilities for complicated alliances.

The Diplomacy Artificial Intelligence Development Environment (DAIDE) project[29] is a hobby project to produce computer AIs capable of playing Diplomacy, and allow them to play against each other and against humans. The AIs being produced by this project are mostly only capable of playing games without negotiation, and are somewhat weaker than most human players, although several of the AIs are significantly stronger than the AIs in any of the commercially released Diplomacy games.

Awards

Diplomacy was inducted into the Academy of Adventure Gaming Arts and Design Adventure Hall of Fame in 1994.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Calhamer, Allan. "The Invention of Diplomacy", in Games & Puzzles, No. 21, January 1974. [1]
  2. ^ a b c Parlett, David. The Oxford History of Board Games. Oxford University Press, UK, 1999. ISBN 0-19-212998-8. pp. 361–362.
  3. ^ http://devel.diplom.org/Zine/S2002R/Miller/What_is_njudge.html
  4. ^ http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/May-2009/All-in-the-Game/
  5. ^ Games & Puzzles magazine, May 1973.
  6. ^ McClellan, Joseph. "Lying and Cheating by the Rules," Washington Post, June 2, 1986.
  7. ^ Diplomacy page of BoardGameGeek [2], retrieved January 25, 2008.
  8. ^ Imperial – Asia Expansion Map and Rules | File Info | Imperial | BoardGameGeek
  9. ^ Hundred on BoardGameGeek and [3]
  10. ^ Ard-Rí on BoardGameGeek and [4]
  11. ^ Classical on BoardGameGeek and [5]
  12. ^ DipWiki: VZ
  13. ^ "Comparison of Fleet Rome with standard diplomacy by Jim Burgess". http://www.diplom.org/Zine/S2003M/Burgess/Rome.html. 
  14. ^ "Diplomatic Pouch review of Renaissance Diplomacy by Charles Roburn". http://www.diplom.org/Zine/S2007M/Roburn/renaissance.htm. 
  15. ^ "Overview of Renaissance Diplomacy". http://www.variantbank.org/results/rules/r/renaissance2.htm. 
  16. ^ Intimate Diplomacy 1a, variant bank, Steve Doubleday and Adrien Baird [6] retrieved 23 March 2011
  17. ^ mind Sports Olympiad website on intimate diplomacy [7] retrieved 23 March 2011
  18. ^ Peery, Larry. "A History of World DipCon". Diplomatic Corps. http://www.diplomaticcorps.org/History/WDCHistory.txt. 
  19. ^ At John Koning's home, August 31st 1966
  20. ^ Birsan, Edi, et al.. "The DipCon Story". Diplomatic Corps. http://www.diplomaticcorps.org/History/DipConHistory.txt. 
  21. ^ World Diplomacy Database
  22. ^ a b Meinel, Jim. Encyclopedia of Postal Diplomacy Zines. Great White North Productions, Alaska, USA, 1992.
  23. ^ Sharp, Richard. The Game of Diplomacy. Arthur Barker, UK, 1978. ISBN 0213166763.
  24. ^ "1989 Runestone Poll Results", Diplomacy World, Issue 56 (Fall 1989), pp. 69–71.
  25. ^ Web-based diplomacy screenshot
  26. ^ "GameSpy review". http://pc.gamespy.com/pc/diplomacy-2005/665958p1.html. 
  27. ^ "GameSpot review". http://www.gamespot.com/pc/strategy/diplomacy2005/review.html. 
  28. ^ "Eurogamer review". http://www.eurogamer.net/article.php?article_id=61923. 
  29. ^ http://www.daide.org.uk
  30. ^ "Origins Award Winners (1993)". Academy of Adventure Gaming Arts and Design. Archived from the original on 2008-01-05. http://web.archive.org/web/20080105093148/http://www.originsgamefair.com/awards/1993/list-of-winners. Retrieved 2008-01-19. 

Further reading

External links

  • Diplomatsgr – Greek Diplomacy Community
  • DiplomaticCorp – Web/Email based Diplomacy community
  • Diplomacy — official page on the Wizards of the Coast website
  • Diplomatic Pouch — Leading online Diplomacy resource center, with regular online magazine
  • DipWiki – Community-maintained database of Diplomacy strategy articles and variants
  • Continental associations:
    • EDA — European Diplomacy Association
    • NADF — North American Diplomacy Federation
    • DAANZ — Diplomacy Association of Australia and New Zealand
  • Diplomacy at BoardGameGeek
  • Diplomacy Archive by Stephen Agar
  • Diplomacy World — Official page of Diplomacy World, the flagship hobby publication since the 1970s, now available free
  • "World Domination: the Game" — article in the Washington Post, November 14, 2004
  • Diplomacy.Ca – Web/Forum based Diplomacy community for articles, strategies and game play. Operating since 1985

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