Crusader Kings 2

You can't say something like that and not provide pictorial evidence.

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Note that "Arabia" is a duchy ruled by the former HREmperor, and was also in revolt against Byz at the time. Armenia and the other places in the Caucasus were my allies.

also from the same game:
Spoiler :
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The latter happened a total of three times. Lunacy runs in the family apparently.


I somehow won the revolt btw. The Fatimids declared war on Byzantium and I noticed the Emperor was willing to surrender for "Under attack from external threat +++++" or something when I went to try and make white peace.
 
I see crusades succeed all the time and I see the Byzantines beat back the Seljuks plenty of times. Not sure what you folks are talking about.
 
What's the horse's Diplo skill? :p
 
Does it actually have a portrait? Or is it just blank?

I should take some screenshots of my Count of Auxerre game. Became the Duke of Burgundy, then bolted France and joined the HRE. Started taking tons of other nearby provinces and became the King of Burgundy and Lotharingia. Now trying to figure out how to weaken the HRE because it has not only consumed Italy but Spain and bits of North Africa, and the dukes keep voting for high and absolute crown authority. Not cool.
 
Does it actually have a portrait? Or is it just blank?

I should take some screenshots of my Count of Auxerre game. Became the Duke of Burgundy, then bolted France and joined the HRE. Started taking tons of other nearby provinces and became the King of Burgundy and Lotharingia. Now trying to figure out how to weaken the HRE because it has not only consumed Italy but Spain and bits of North Africa, and the dukes keep voting for high and absolute crown authority. Not cool.

Solution:

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(Unless they somehow (somehow) aren't doing so well?)
 
I started in 1084, I think, whatever the Alexiad starting point is. From what I remember the Fatimids are doing all right but aren't as scary as they would be if I started in 1066. First Crusade for Jerusalem was won by Denmark and a crusade against Arab possessions in Sicily was won by Norway. Norway has held onto the island of Sicily and a few provinces south of Naples, but the rest is gobbled by the HRE and I think an odd East Roman duke. The Ilkhanate is starting to gobble up the East. The Emperor can muster massive doomstacks of 50k+ men from his territories and give the "great grey smackdown" to whoever he pleases.
 
The Crimean kingdom just became de jure part of the Golden Horde.

This kingdom has two duchies. Both are owned by the same Muslim.

I am not Muslim.
 
He's not on the English throne as well, right? Just France?

Weird. The Capets can't catch a break in this game.
 
...

o.O

I don't get that. He's king of England(, France and Jerusalem), but he isn't 'the Conqueror'?

Also, I think the world might actually end on Friday. A non-minor part of the world in my game actually has semi-sensible borders:

Spoiler :
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Someone should start a game as the HRE and see how long they can prevent any borders from changing at all.
 
Oh, right, I can see the title list. France, England, and Jerusalem? What a bastard!

In my game, I'm up to Burgundy, Lotharingia, France, and Aquitaine. Obtained France purely through surprise when after transitioning to an elective monarchy, the dukes of France elected me over the guys who overthrew the Capets. Then, I made the Kingdom of Aquitaine because my wife was the Duchess of Toulouse and I figured she needed an upgrade.
 
The first Dev Diary for the Republics are up; link here.

For those too lazy to click the link or can't access it:

Well folks, we're coming up on Christmas and, according to some, the end of the world.

But in the event that the world is still around on January 14,
I might as well start writing this dev diary on the next expansion for Crusader Kings II; a little thing we call The Republic.

The expansion will make the great Merchant Republics playable; Venice, Genoa, Pisa, Gotland and the Hansa. What about Novgorod, Florence and Cordoba you ask? Bruges and the "Vier Leden"? The lesser Italian republics? The short answer is that they did not quite qualify. Some of them were not really mercantile in nature, some were more or less ruled by a princely family, others were landlocked, and the rest were too minor. Instead, we chose to focus on the big five (though new ones can appear during the game.)

Now, we did not want to mess with the Dynasty based gameplay that makes Crusader Kings II unique, so rather than playing a succession of Doges from various different merchant families (like in Europa Universalis III), you will be the head of one such family - a Patrician. For simplicity's sake, the Merchant Republics (much like New York) are run by five families who take turns at being Godfather - I mean Doge. This is rather similar to how Elective Monarchies work in the game; if you lose an election, you can still keep playing though you no longer control the entire republic.

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Patricians have a special land holding called the Family Palace, which does not exist on the map but grants them a decent levy and tax income even without being proper rulers. In fact, players should not expect to hold the Doge position for several consecutive terms (more on that in a later dev diary.) The Family Palace can be upgraded like any normal Holding (castles, cities and temples), but it should not be understood as just a single physical building; rather, it represents a range of assets controlled by the family. Thus, it cannot be occupied or otherwise interfered with by your enemies.

While Patricians have a bourgeois background and are not proper members of the nobility, they are still important players in European medieval politics. Thus, they can secure alliances through marriage just like feudal lords. However, they cannot marry matrilineally and any marriage proposals made to the nobility must be accompanied by an appropriate bride price, which can be pretty steep. Moreover, children born to such couples can not inherit both the Patrician holdings and a feudal domain. What tends to happen is that one child becomes a lord and another takes over as Patrician (although Patricians are limited to Agnatic Seniority succession, so it's more likely an older relative becomes the next Patrician.)

So what makes playing a Patrician really different from playing a feudal lord? That's a subject for next time! Until then, I wish you all a really

MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Nothing new. A bit disappointed there won't be more playable republics (although it seems just for the 1066 start, hopefully?) and it's mostly stuff that's already been announced, but otherwise I'm still exited.
 
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