As usual, I am learning a lot from PBEM that never came up against the AI.
I encountered another surprise on timing within a single turn, and I would like to ask if anyone else has confirmation on the way this works.
In specific, as you probably know, the Union player has an early ultimatum that it must capture Manassas by September 1861. Against a prepared CSA player, this is quite challenging, and the stakes are extremely high: minus 10 National morale for failing. I acknowledge that this creates the intended pressure on the Union player to make a premature play for Manassas (as McDowell was directed to do).
My first surprise was that I successfully captured Manassas on the first day of the Late September turn. My unhappy surprise was that at the end of that turn, the bastard journalists howled anyway, and took away my 10 morale.
I hope you will forgive my disappointment: this is the most severe event in the entire game (matched later with similar demands from the press). 10 morale is otherwise impossible to gain or lose without capturing an enemy capital (and virtually impossible against a human, who will move his capital cheaply in advance).
As you will see from the attachment, the howling occurs at the end of the turn, day 15 (September 30). The victory at Manassas was accomplished day one with a successful assault (September 16, two weeks earlier). I have to conclude from this that the event itself must ignore whatever occurs during the turn. This ends up requiring success by Early September, rather than Late September.
Is this interpretation correct? Is that what was intended? Is there an engine limitation that places the results a turn behind the deadline?
Many thanks for your information and clarification, -D