Not really. Saxony and Brandenburg remained the Electorates of HRE until its end (and The Palatinate was the Electorate until its crushing defeat in the 30 Years War) despite being Protestant.brisduv said:I don't know the rules for HRE yet, but it shouldn't the emperor nation AND the electors all be Roman Catholic?
An Elector can become the Emperor - he just can't vote for himself.gdo01 said:Is it me or did none of the electors vote for Athens at all?
I see two votes for one of the electors but I don't think electors can become emperor. But again did anyone vote for Athens at all?
Not very if I have anything to do with it!Fulcrumvale said:How long will it be before Rebel Scum gets elected emperor?
Well, get to it then!jonti-h said:Not very if I have anything to do with it!
If every nation has relations still with the rebels, and the electors like the rebels more than they like each other it should (with a few annexations) be possible to get them elected. I'll see what I can do......
The Same happen in my game....the creeks completely taken the Andalucia and Lisbon CoT....DrunkenOne said:Shawnee, Cherokee, and Creek have 5, 5, 4 merchants in andalusia and now basically have exclusive control over the most lucrative trade center. Yay for complete retardedness in game design, natives across the ocean without any way of even reaching spain > advanced local european traders obviously.
Nimic said:This happens often enough, but it amazes me what the EU3-time generals would call a "victory".
Would you believe I had the all-cavalry army?
Sabaron said:
The Ethiopian guy stole my thunder. This is still pretty weird, though. In order to form Ireland, I've had to annex like mad (and fight multiple offensive wars against England). Without trying at all I'm suddenly Emperor? I have negative relations with everyone who voted for me!