Crusader Kings 2 De Jure Drift 1
Crusader Kings 2 was received as one of the most involving medieval Europe simulators released in the past year (an accolade many strive for and often fall short of) and since its release has been enjoying a steady stream of patches. Well, so long as you went to the game’s website and updated your install yourself. Not, though, Paradox have pushed all the patches to Steam bringing the game up to date and adding a huge amount of new content.I’ve copied the entire thing in below, lifting it all from, but cast your eyes over just the major updates if none of the others:– Added Nahua culture and Aztec religion– Faction System– Characters can have both a Plot and an Ambition– Retinue System support for the Legacy of Rome DLC– Orthodox and related religions have Autocephalous Patriarchs and the Pentarchy– Rebalanced Combat, with more focus on leaders and their traits. More leader traits.– Liege levies. You only raise levies from your direct vassals, and they are not directly connected to Holdings.– A number of self improvement Ambitions for characters– New religions: Miaphysite, Nestorian, Monothelite– Two new Bookmarks: The Alexiad and The Latin Empire– AI: Improved military AI– Major speed optimizations– Greatly reduced graphics memory load– Plugged some memory leaks– New events for characters with the lunatic trait– Spymaster’s Discover Plots job has been renamed to Scheme, and now also affects faction membership– New icons added to all decisionsNeat-o, right?
Crusader Kings 2 De Jure Drift Video
Titles with de jure vassals transforming into titular titles. You are allies with all Kingdoms but Andalusia and always join with the defender when they fight each other until the de jure drift finishes, effectively serving as a peacekeeper. Browse other questions tagged crusader-kings-2 or ask your own question. From Crusader Kings II Wiki. De facto owners of parts of a de jure realm are then granted voting rights for laws if the rulers are of the same religion. De jure drift. De jure drift or assimilation is the process by which the de jure borders of kingdoms and empires can change over time.