The forced bankruptcy limit is, and has always been, "your total ducats in the treasury is negative after end-of-month processing and no loan is available".
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The AI do go bankrupt. You can check for yourself by enabling bankruptcy pop ups. What I don't know is if they can declare bankruptcy or only go bankrupt when they are forced to by the game systems.
Used to be the case that AI would declare bankruptcy on more reasonable conditions but as is the case with most everything AI related this day, it got changed and now isn't working as well as it used to.
I was thinking of starting my first game in over a year and buying the new expansion but this sounds like a bad enough bug that I need to wait. I'm not starting a four player Grand Campaign with a bug like this.
Based on the tweet above, I'd say someone in a project management or senior (C++) developer role is back in the office.This year most Swedish people stop their vacation on 3rd or 10th of August. In my company I'd say half come back 3rd and half come back 10th. Maybe same at Paradox, unless they all time their vacations to be for the same period of time, due to a lot of them working in groups.
Based on the tweet above, I'd say someone in a project management or senior (C++) developer role is back in the office.
Im really sorry to say that and got problems with moderator for saying that, but for me, planning dev diary for 1.31 is close to an insult to customers.
Personally i am less bothered with the bug itself, than with company attitude. I mean there is major flaw with something they sold to us and they could not be bothered to postpone holidays for 1 week for 1-2 developers or hire outside help/move devs from other projects for a week before holidays and crunch bugs?
I mean i do not expect them to fix each and every one of existing bugs but major ones yes.
I wouldn't be too sure. The reply comes from their social media team, and "we are looking into the issue" and "we hope to fix this at..." wordings can mean anything from "we heard the complaints" to "someone actually looked at the problem and is ready to start implementing a fix". I mean it's great that someone finally acknowledged the issue, but I don't think significant work on this will start until the Swedish summer holidays are over.Based on the tweet above, I'd say someone in a project management or senior (C++) developer role is back in the office.
What do you envision "crunching bugs" to look like? Send programmers into the code mines and hammer the bugs until they are gone?Personally i am less bothered with the bug itself, than with company attitude. I mean there is major flaw with something they sold to us and they could not be bothered to postpone holidays for 1 week for 1-2 developers or hire outside help/move devs from other projects for a week before holidays and crunch bugs?
I mean i do not expect them to fix each and every one of existing bugs but major ones yes.