I was badly burnt by the IR release I'm not convinced to buy this, plus I wasn't a huge fan of CK2 compared to EU....
Will try to resist
It's the complete opposite end of the spectrum to IR. Much better launch.
I was badly burnt by the IR release I'm not convinced to buy this, plus I wasn't a huge fan of CK2 compared to EU....
Will try to resist
I don't really care if some content is lacking because there's no insane amount of DLC yet or good mods.I'd also like to know how much content this game would be lacking, compared to CK2 with all the DLC. Although it's unfair to compare a new release to a game which has been out and had DLC released since 2012.
It makes my PC quite loud so I used Afterburner to limit it to 30fps as I don't need it running at 144! Just checking this doesn't affect time in game does it?
Tutorial + tooltipsAny tips for a complete noob to this? Thinking of having a go later and I'm overwhelmed just thinking about it.
Tutorial + tooltips![]()
This. The tutorial doesn't tell you everything - I don't think it tells you how to set rally points, which is a very important thing, and you're not told how succession works until you actually die - but it will teach you the very basics of acquiring territory and alliances. It also gives you a huge initial boost of money, prestige and holding improvements and you start as Catholic so you can get Pope gold too. I would recommend playing only until you fully form Ireland and then a bit longer to work out how to expand onto the mainland. Then, restart and try playing Murchad again from his normal start as an Insular Christian. You should still be able to form Ireland without too much trouble, but it will probably take most of Murchad's life to reach the point where your kingdom and permitted two Duchies are Tanist instead of 5-10 years.
Anybody else really struggling to quickly see alliances and also look after their realm? I get confused when people within my realm start having wars with eachother and there isn't anything I can do.
You can raise the Crown authority to stop your vassals fighting each other. And raise it more to stop them fighting outside your realm too. Alliances are on your played chars main page but I don't think you mean that?? Do you mean something more like a map mode?? (which I agree with)
What is the best way to use tanistry? do I need to add tanistry to my duchy title as well as the kingdom one? will that mean that the successive primary heirs always get both?