So, I'm in this U.S. game, and I start out with 2/4 of New England, a couple of Great Lakes, one or two in the Southeast, and some others scattered about. I take the easy plan: take New England and head south.
Due to some loaded dice, it ends up taking too many turns (and armies) for New England to be mathematically worthwhile, but I go ahead and take it out of determination (and frustration).
The Yellow guy starts laying into me because the Blue player is getting strong and I'm not weakening my position in New England to make a suicide run on Mr. Blue. I will gladly do this, but I won't weaken my New England defenses to do it because Yellow is positioned to just waltz into New England. Yellow ends up taking out a personal vendetta against me ignoring the other two players completely. I tried to be diplomatic in the chat, but ended up purposely taking myself out of the game mostly because I got tired of the guys actions and words and I wasn't going to get anywhere in the game.
1. Is it right/wrong/cowardly/smart to just bail out of the game like this? A little cowardly, but I don't need some weirdo who doesn't understand the ranking system, and I'm willing to take the loss and move on.
2. How do you deal with people who try to insist that you play the game the way they want? My diplomacy failed, obviously.
3. Would you leave feedback for this guy? I am inclined to do so.
4. Should I expect feedback from this guy? I expect retaliatory feedback, at least.