I’m probably going to regret this…
…But if any of you have some good ideas for funny (but not too silly) airline names to be used in Rushing Tin I’m all ears.
Just post a comment below and I’ll consider them.
I’m probably going to regret this…
…But if any of you have some good ideas for funny (but not too silly) airline names to be used in Rushing Tin I’m all ears.
Just post a comment below and I’ll consider them.
A Word About Pending Hand-Offs
So we know the best strategy in Rushing Tin is thinking a couple of moves ahead when moving your planes.
But when it comes to Pending Hand-Offs it can be about thinking five or six moves ahead.
You see if you have a plane which (if all goes well) should be handed-off in about 5 moves or so, you better keep an eye out for your opponents Pending Hand-offs.
Because nothing’s more frustrating than lining up a flight to be handed off on your next turn, and discovering your opponent has just accepted a Pending Hand-off which will enter at the the same point your plane will exit!
It’s you who will have the deal…
It’s you who will fall out of favour with the airline…
And it’s you who’ll kick yourself saying, “why the heck didn’t I see that coming?”
Monitoring what other players have in their Pending Hand-Offs is often overlooked by new players, and these players can be easy pickings for blackmail, bribes and trades.
Had a really good shift?
Why not send it in as a Sector Challenge? And let other players have a go at beating it?
All you need to do is list the times each plane entered the Sector and what time they left. This will allow other players to try and improve on your performance using the same schedules. Remember to make a note of any weather or random events which occurred and to what schedules.
Just list the details in an email and send it to:
sectorchallenge@rushingtin.com
And see it posted in the Sector Challenge section along with the best performances submitted by other players.