(Originally discussed in #2784)
- As it is now, we have it setup so that China's de jure hierarchy will always stay the same, since we wanted to make sure the Dynastic Cycle would still work. This should probably be changed eventually to better reflect what happens in Imperator.
- I currently have it so that every empire that is a majority Chinese heritage cultures will be put under
h_china, and any hegemony ruled by a Chinese heritage character that is in some way connected to the existing de jure land under h_china has it's de jure land put under China.
- If we make it so that China's de jure hierarchy isn't preserved at all, this would likely also need to be changed so that any de jure empire title that has a Chinese heritage ruler at game start is also put under
h_china.
- I could also make it so that the Chinese heritage empire title, if it exists, gets split up and put under
h_china (likely by the Rome praetorian regions, since that is how we are splitting other empires under hegemonies, and the regions in China match it's base game empire titles already, so that is setup)
- Would need to make sure that the Ministry empire titles are always properly de jure under
h_china
- If
h_china happens to lose all of it's de jure land, the Dynastic Cycle situation will break since the decision to declare yourself the Emperor of China requires you to control 51% of the de jure land under h_china, and the participants in the situation are based off if you own land that is de jure under China, and whether you are a vassal under h_china.
- A decision should probably be made that would allow
h_china to get back some de jure land, so the Dynastic Cycle can properly continue. (Could also probably just modify the base game decision to Declare yourself Emperor of China so that it's possible to take if China has no de jure land, but if that's the case, it gives the land you control to China in addition to it's other effects, since those would probably be repeated anyway)
- Conditions?:
- Ruler has a Chinese Heritage
- Is an Emperor
- Is independent
- (Completely controls an Empire in China and has a certain realm size) OR (Controls a certain percentage of base game de jure China) ?
- Effects?:
- Every held/completely controlled empire title becomes de jure part of
h_china (should this be limited to just empires in the region of China?)
- The new de jure land under
h_china is immediately added as part of the Dynastic Cycle land
- (More or less, a copy of the effects from the base game decision to declare yourself Emperor of China)
(Originally discussed in #2784)
h_china, and any hegemony ruled by a Chinese heritage character that is in some way connected to the existing de jure land underh_chinahas it's de jure land put under China.h_china.h_china(likely by the Rome praetorian regions, since that is how we are splitting other empires under hegemonies, and the regions in China match it's base game empire titles already, so that is setup)h_chinah_chinahappens to lose all of it's de jure land, the Dynastic Cycle situation will break since the decision to declare yourself the Emperor of China requires you to control 51% of the de jure land underh_china, and the participants in the situation are based off if you own land that is de jure under China, and whether you are a vassal underh_china.h_chinato get back some de jure land, so the Dynastic Cycle can properly continue. (Could also probably just modify the base game decision to Declare yourself Emperor of China so that it's possible to take if China has no de jure land, but if that's the case, it gives the land you control to China in addition to it's other effects, since those would probably be repeated anyway)h_china(should this be limited to just empires in the region of China?)h_chinais immediately added as part of the Dynastic Cycle land