Alliances

Alliances gameplay is group politics layered on top of team play. You still mine, build, and fight, but the real advantage comes from relationships: who you trust, who you trade with, and who answers a call when a fight starts. Most setups sit above factions, towns, or clans, letting multiple groups coordinate without fully merging, so borders and reputation carry weight.

The core loop mixes building your own strength with maintaining agreements. Players share intel in Discord, run joint resource trips, move valuables to safer storage, and stage kits in forward positions. When conflict hits, it tends to be multi-party: scouts watch key routes, portals get controlled, claims get pressured on a schedule, and counter-raids land when defenders are thin. Good logistics often matter as much as good aim.

What it feels like is constant strategic pressure. A single raid can pull allies into a wider war, and one betrayal can collapse months of stability. Some servers support alliances with shared chat, permission flags, or friendly-fire toggles, but the deciding factor is still player-driven diplomacy. Strong groups keep alliances practical with clear boundaries on base access, kit lending, and what counts as escalation.

This format rewards leaders who can coordinate time zones, keep comms disciplined, and pick fights that have an exit plan. It also gives smaller groups real leverage: tight intel, targeted hits, and dependable support can beat raw numbers if the network behind them is solid.