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Post by Judge Sam on Jun 9, 2007 0:36:09 GMT -5
Sure they have 5 out of 11 people at the moment, but this round could be tricky.
For example let's say the Spies lie about their votes, and it turns out to be 6-5 with the Citizens all voting together. That could mean they lose.
Would you sacrifice one of your own Spies if it looked like enough people were voting for them? It'd be hard to tell with this group, it's not like there would be a major movement or anything. Or should a Spy deliberately do it?
Even if they find out Citizen A is going to vote for Citizen B, can they trust them enough to bet the whole game on the fact that this is true and have the other 5 Spies vote for Citizen B?
What do you expect the vote count will be like? What would you do if you were a Spy in this situation?
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Post by Trina on Jun 9, 2007 16:08:55 GMT -5
I would probably just go with the citizens and vote with them but inform the spies of what was happening. You have to play both sides sometimes. This is definitely a tough question.
I think the vote count for this will be like unanimously one person or something because no one would want to stray away.
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Post by Jack on Jun 9, 2007 19:21:45 GMT -5
Agreed. Eventually they will slip up. If they get it right and catch 5 people on a separate wagon, then the Spies will be hit hard.
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Post by Anneliese on Jun 10, 2007 11:28:01 GMT -5
I would probably sacrifice myself, or definitely not vote with all of the spies. Having a 6-5 vote just makes the game an instant defeat.
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Post by Jessica on Jun 12, 2007 20:15:16 GMT -5
We chose this one! Even if they find out Citizen A is going to vote for Citizen B, can they trust them enough to bet the whole game on the fact that this is true and have the other 5 Spies vote for Citizen B? "Having a 6-5 vote just makes the game an instant defeat."-Anneliese A DEFEAT FOR THE CITIZENS.
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