My exact steps are, when done correctly: 1. Open my previous post for editing (to copy the raw contents) 2. Close my previous post without any changes ( I just wanted the raw content) 3. Hit "reply" to the latest post (a turn taken by my opponent) 4. Paste the contents of my the previous post into the new reply (as the formatting of the post is largely identical, to communicate game state; some values and sections are changed) 5. Start changing the reply (starting from the exact contents of the old post) to reflect my new turn (I change the title to reflect the current turn number, change various sections to reflect new turn state and actions, etc). However, sometimes I skip steps 2-4 by accident (the UI for editing an old post and starting a new post look largely the same, minus the "Reply" vs. "Save Edit" CTA button). Sometimes I notice that the CTA is changed, copy the new post, close the edit (that I've put new contents into) so that it doesn't overwrite, then execute steps 2-4. There's no problem if I remember to do that. It's just when I accidentally hit "Save Edit" that my previous post is very difficult to reproduce. So, I end up editing the previous post with my new post contents (again, from a raw perspective the contents look very similar, see the example I linked), and I am unable to revert it easily. Does that make sense?