Nationality: British
Religion: Sikh
Ideology: Radical Liberalism
Issues: Civil Rights, Environmentalism, technology
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Sadda Haq- the film goes ahead!
Paradox Sikh Sangat
Deg Tegh Fateh development thread- SUSPENDED
I was never able to have elected ruler for longer than 8 years... or maybe i am wrong?
Nationality: British
Religion: Sikh
Ideology: Radical Liberalism
Issues: Civil Rights, Environmentalism, technology
Current Occupation: University Student! Upgrade!
Sadda Haq- the film goes ahead!
Paradox Sikh Sangat
Deg Tegh Fateh development thread- SUSPENDED
I think there was a hidden rule where you could not elect someone twice continuisly after that ruler won the first election, but as an administrative republic I did manage to elect a 9/9/9 ruler for 16 years, hehe.
Experience is the teacher of all things. - Julius Caesar
"You cannot invade the mainland United States. There would be a man with a rifle behind every blade of grass." - Admiral Yamamoto.
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Milan in This will teach you-member of the Constitutional Convention
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I can say with 100% certainty that you can elect a ruler over and over until he dies. There are no term limits in EU3 DW. Maybe those who are saying otherwise have just had bad luck with their best republican leaders.
There was also a tread on this a couple of weeks back. I believe the conclusion was that if a republic and a monarchy both have rulers with the same stats, the monarchy will be better. However, if those stats aren't good, you can ditch the guy if you're a republic and get a new one elected after four years, whereas you can be stuck with the same king for decades. Also, a 3/3/3 ruler isn't possible for a republic, monarchies get PU's, republics don't get regencies.
Sometimes I switch to a republic if my monarchy is doing badly, with low legitimacy, or an incredibly bad heir, with an old king.
Sometimes I also switch several times during my games. I know it's not ideal, but it works for me.
I NEVER switch to a monarchy from a republic, but I'll certainly consider the other way around-- especially if I'm playing a trade-heavy game like Holland -> Netherlands.
The main bonus of monarchies(IMO) is the Imperialism casus beli which only 2 republics get Republican Dictatorship is one of them but it doesn't get elections and Rev.Republic but it's hard to get a Rev.Republic but if you do I suggest to not switch from it because Imperialism CB+Elections+0.6 boost to morale=Epic
How do you get revolutionary governments anyway?
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Does anyone know how bureaucratic despotism works? Wiki says there's no elections... and yet its also called a republic. Does that mean you get a monarch for life, but you can't enter into personal unions? Is legitimacy an issue?
Experience is the teacher of all things. - Julius Caesar
"You cannot invade the mainland United States. There would be a man with a rifle behind every blade of grass." - Admiral Yamamoto.
Multiplayer Games
Memes make everything better
Current games-
Milan in This will teach you-member of the Constitutional Convention
France in Supremacy
Bureaucratic despotism IS a republic , where your ruler get 'elected' for life so you'll have to choose only once.
but it's pretty lousy compared to constitutionnal anyway.
To become the revolution target and adopt a revolutionary republic government, you need an event to fire which requires you to have your capital in Europe, govt. tech 53, 10+ provinces, and the "revolution" flag, and for no current revolution target to exist. Getting the revolution flag requires an event to fire which requires you to be at peace and have a non-constitutional non-revolutionary non-theocratic government, 6+ WE, negative prestige, and 5+ provinces.
To become a revolutionary empire, you have to be a revolutionary republic.
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Overall Monarchies are more powerful than Republics - legitimacy provides massive bonuses, and of course PUs if you make use of them. That being said, in certain cases Republic can be tremendously valuable. This is especially true if you need to Westernize: while a monarchy might get lucky and get the right stats on a ruler, there's no guarantee of when or even if that will happen.