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Post by Suvorov on Dec 31, 2015 20:48:15 GMT
If this happened to me it would crush me. That's why I backup my data once a week How?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2016 1:39:18 GMT
That's why I backup my data once a week How? I use titanium backup
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Post by Vatutin on Jan 1, 2016 3:19:47 GMT
Opened WC3 1 hour ago, all my data was deleted. Worked my Tale of for 40 minutes and it's still this :
I just lost faith in humanity. I'm still 600 in-game years away from my original game and 60 HQ levels Yeah but it's not bad as mine appleid was hijacked
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Post by General William T. Sherman on Jan 1, 2016 3:44:27 GMT
Damn suvorov, i feel really bad. You were body at that game.
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Post by Dwight Eisenhower on Jan 1, 2016 5:34:44 GMT
100!!!!
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Post by António Salazar on Jan 1, 2016 11:31:28 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally.
I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!!
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Post by Napoleon Bonaparte on Jan 1, 2016 11:39:50 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally. I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!! diplomacy eh
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Post by Vatutin on Jan 1, 2016 17:05:50 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally. I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!! Yeah I learned in French class about a bridge after a Russian tsar
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Post by Jean Lannes on Jan 1, 2016 17:21:12 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally. I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!! So that's what caused WW1, a bridge
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Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2016 18:37:16 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally. I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!! So that's what caused WW1, a bridge Nah it wasn't bridge it was name of it
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Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2016 23:46:40 GMT
I am marshal now
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Post by Moreau on Jan 1, 2016 23:54:35 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally. I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!! you betrayed Napoléon
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Post by António Salazar on Jan 2, 2016 9:47:55 GMT
During the occupation of Paris by the Allies, Prussian General Blücher wanted to destroy the Pont d'Iéna, which was named after a French victorious battle against Prussia. The Prefect of Paris tried everything to change the mind of Blücher, without success, and finally went to Talleyrand asking him whether he could write a letter to the General asking him not to destroy the bridge. Talleyrand instead wrote to Tsar Alexander, who was in person in Paris, asking him to grant to the people of Paris the favour of inaugurating himself the bridge under a new name (Pont de l'École militaire). The Tsar accepted, and Blücher could not then destroy a bridge inaugurated by an Ally. I just read this somewhere, first a bridge ..soon the world!!! you betrayed Napoléon I am a winner, I convert to the side that is winning. Napoleon in 1815 was just a fool
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Post by Władysław Anders on Jan 2, 2016 18:09:35 GMT
Blah
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Post by Władysław Anders on Jan 2, 2016 18:09:48 GMT
Blah Blah
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