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The Ten Commandments of The Empire of War

ThuBioNerd

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V1 Veteran
If though wishest to be a loved, revered, trusted, and honored warrior, thou shalt regard and utilize these commandments at all times, never breaking nor defiling them, nor add-libing, nor bending.

1. Though shalt not disrespect your superior officers (Commanders, Elven Lords, Black Uruks, Gundabads, etc.).

2. Thou shalt fight with honor and valor, neither complaining or calling hax when thou art defeated in the course of combat.

3. Thou shalt not divulge information to the enemy, nor in any way aid the enemy or hinder your allies.

4. If any soldier wishes to remain neutral and neither harm nor be harmed, thou shalt respect his wishes, unless he breaketh this armistice.

5. Though shalt use neither hacking devices, nor cheat, but rather only use the modifications provided for thee in the shops.

6. Though shalt neither spam, advertise, use excessive profanity, nor in any other way annoy the other players.

7. Thou shalt not abuse your power of uniting your allies under your banner, leading them into death intentionally.

8. Though shalt use common sense in all your actions.

9. Though shalt not spam with arrows, as this is a cowardly occupation.

10. Though shalt never, in any of your battles or campaigns or sieges, forsake your comrades and flee or hide, leaving them to their fate.
 
Someone engrave these lines on two stones on top of a mountain, like Minas Tirith or Isengard.
 
You know, in Latin, and other Romance languages, like French, you may notice people say no or yes after sentences ("It is good, yes?"). There is a reason for this. In these languages, when you write a question, you put a word before the rest of the sentence. In Latin it is Nom, or Nonne. One means that you expect a yes answer, the other a no answer (Counter-respectively). You put not.
xD
 
You know, in Latin, and other Romance languages, like French, you may notice people say no or yes after sentences ("It is good, yes?"). There is a reason for this. In these languages, when you write a question, you put a word before the rest of the sentence. In Latin it is Nom, or Nonne. One means that you expect a yes answer, the other a no answer (Counter-respectively). You put not.
xD

Well, that's just odd.
 
[quote user_id="8861015" avatar="https://cravatar.eu/helmavatar/DimitriP_13421/74.png" name="DimitriP_13421"]The fourth one has been broken so many times. Why do people want to kill Dimitri the friendly orc and the quest to the bards hq.
well uh dimitriP the "friendly orc" says he is one of the 12 and has some nasty sword[/quote]

Those days are over. The time of Dale has begun.
 
Im fairly sure you forgot:

11: do not try to get trolls nerfed
12: do not repeatedly ask for a naz taxi if they have said no (i still get requests for it even tho naz taxi's been removed -_-)
13: do not constantly switch teams
14: do not say "i hate pelenor on the server-do it on the forums

other than that u got everything-great job with the old english- and i would like to see this posted somewhere
 
If though wishest to be a loved, revered, trusted, and honored warrior, thou shalt regard and utilize these commandments at all times, never breaking nor defiling them, nor add-libing, nor bending.

1. Though shalt not disrespect your superior officers (Commanders, Elven Lords, Black Uruks, Gundabads, etc.).
I can't always do that, because I often respect myself so much more than I respect the officer (I mean, some donators are just not respectable) :P
 
Also we forgot the rule
38. Don't go in the bard's HQ or otherwise bother the bards unless asked to do so
or even
39. Stop asking-eth me to join the bards!
 
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