login
|
language
简体中文 (Simplified Chinese)
繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
日本語 (Japanese)
한국어 (Korean)
ไทย (Thai)
Български (Bulgarian)
Čeština (Czech)
Dansk (Danish)
Deutsch (German)
Español - España (Spanish - Spain)
Español - Latinoamérica (Spanish - Latin America)
Ελληνικά (Greek)
Français (French)
Italiano (Italian)
Magyar (Hungarian)
Nederlands (Dutch)
Norsk (Norwegian)
Polski (Polish)
Português (Portuguese - Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Portuguese - Brazil)
Română (Romanian)
Русский (Russian)
Suomi (Finnish)
Svenska (Swedish)
Türkçe (Turkish)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
Українська (Ukrainian)
Report a translation problem


I'm off to do Simian Flu and then go over the Scenarios as requested starting tomorrow. Off to bed now :)
I want to start on Scenarios right away but there may be a delay as I've got an intestinal infection that requires I visit the hospital all week (they'll want me to stay overnight but I never do. Childhood trauma! But hilarious that I post the last Official Plague before working on my own Cure Progress!)
If delayed I will get to those asap.
Of course, you might miss greenland/carribean or new zealand/phillipines from time to time but all in all, the chances of hitting everything are definitely much higher.
I used to use UK, India, and thereabouts to get things rolling, but the location is just not there to pick up enough momentum to start sending out those disease vectors early - that's what gets the job done.
It's actually an interesting hypothesis for how the world might actually succumb to a disease - noting that the world moves much slower than the world does on Mega-Brutal in this simulator.
The current ebola outbreak in africa killed over a thousand (?) before any airports started closing, or refusing flights from africa. Some infected even landed in the USA (exposing everyone on the flight) whereas in the simulator, the first death causes a cure research cascade, and almost a couple weeks later, isolation of the infected country. interesting.