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De jure drift ck2
De jure drift ck2












de jure drift ck2

Which can (as I found with Pala) end up forming entire new independent kingdoms with a title I didn't make. but it tries to keep inheritance as equal as possible, up to and including forming the highest possible titles that haven't yet been formed in the lands your other heirs inherit. Confederate Partition gives the primary heir the primary title, and anything under that primary title is their vassal. With Confederate Partition it doesn't matter if I don't upgrade my titles.

de jure drift ck2

To the second point, that's exactly the problem with Confederate Partition vs.

de jure drift ck2

To the third point, I've found that it can take well over fifty years with a Steward rocking a 16+ skill. It doesn't help that I strongly prefer playing with equal succession forced in the game rules, so the typical ruler ends up with 4-8 heirs to give lands to. I do often let my kids act as knights, but they die quite rarely when I want them to. Scheming against them generally requires Sadistic. To the first point, disinheriting costs Renown (and gets more expensive every time you do it). With Confederate Partition it just feels like there's no point in even trying to expand. And sure, forming an empire shouldn't be easy or fast, but it's also something where I feel like I should be able to lay the groundwork for it early on by carefully snatching up holdings until, after a few generations, one ruler can opportunistically snatch up a juicy neighbor and form the empire. Which means there's basically no way to prevent the gavelkind explosion while expanding a realm until Early Medieval at the earliest when you get just ordinary Partition succession.Ĭrusader Kings is absolutely a title that's at its best when you're not playing the game purely to paint the map your colors, but conquest is a huge contributor to many of the game's big goals, like forming various empires and kingdoms. They can create duchy and kingdom level titles if your realm is too big and one heir inherits enough stuff that's not de jure a part of your highest title. Confederate Partition means that if any heirs can make a new title when they inherit their realms on succession, they do so automatically. Turns out that CK2 Gavelkind is CK3 Partition. I'd been operating under the assumption that Confederate Partition was just the new term for Gavelkind, until I finally got to Early Medieval era with Bengali culture doing a side playthrough in Pala and looked over my options to find that there's just a normal Partition succession. well, I think I'm probably not gonna do many more 867 starts. So, I finally did some in-depth reading on succession laws and.














De jure drift ck2