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Hi all! Tuesday has crept up on us again and it's time for another Horse Lords dev diary. The topics of the week are the map extension, new modding features and probably some other tidbits that I think of as I go along... First off, we did not increase the size of the base map again as we did for Rajas of India, since the most interesting regions were already on the map due to our funky twisted map projection. In fact, even the Orkhon valley and the old khaganate capitals of Karabalgasun and Karakorum are on the existing map. So we simply added some more counties where there was previously only wasteland; 27 to be exact, spread over 8 de jure duchies and two new kingdoms. The addition of these areas required some new cultures as well: Uyghur, Khitan, Sogdian and Tocharian (and of course a lot of new characters in the database to cover the historical periods.)

Crusader Kings II - Mongolia.jpg


It is a dynamic region where the hegemony of one nomadic tribe was soon overthrown by another, but it is actually possible to play as proper Mongols (Khalkha) even in 769, in the region of Ötüken (though they start out paying tribute to their Uyghur overlords.) In the 769 start, we represent the region as predominantly Manichean and Buddhist (though the reality was more complex.) The Tarim Basin is perhaps of special interest since the Silk Road passes through it. That's it for the map; on to modding!
Crusader Kings II - Orkhon Valley.jpg


Here are some items of particular interest:
  • All scripts under the common folder now use a proper folder structure for easier modding (i.e. more than one file can contain data)
  • You can now script your own triggers and effects (using existing ones) for easy reuse
  • Consistent handling of modded classes; changes are now always added to the modded entity (e.g. a culture or an on_action field), rather than replacing it.
  • The new government system allows you to override or add to the special gameplay rules of religions and cultures

The complete modding change log is a bit... obtuse, but I'm including it here anyway. :)

- Added geographical regions that can be checked in triggers if a title or province is contained in a region defined in map/geographical_region.txt. These regions are static throughout the game and are more reliable than using de-jure triggers for events that you want to affect specific places.
- Bookmarks now uses folder structure
- Combat tactics now uses folder structure
- Disease now uses folder structure
- Job actions now uses folder structure
- Job titles now uses folder structure
- Triggered modifiers now uses folder structure
- Added scripted triggers
- Added scripted effects
- Added create_tradepost effect
- Added folder structure to defines
- Added folder structure to modifier_definitions
- Added MAX_WARDS_PER_GUARDIAN to defines
- Added missing commandline argument "debug" to show debug logs
- Possible to append to cultures from several files
- Possible to append to on_actions from several files
- Added trigger technology_can_spread, checking whether technology can spread in the province.
- Added effects set_special_character_title, remove_special_character_title.
- Can now specify a CB to not be displayed in the diplomatic mapmode
- Culture can now decide if you are allowed to raid or not
- Added external province type in map definitions, will not generate a border or text and can be 1 pixel big
- Added global movement speed modifier
- Now can force contract on specific governments which will bypass the opinion limitations using new government system
- Now possible to disable courtiers from receiving MTTH events in defines
- Added effect set_government_type.
- Governments can be modded in the decisions folder.
- Geographical regions can be modded in the map folder.
- County-, duchy- and sub-region tags can now be used to define island- and geographical regions.
- Added region trigger.
- Added flags reinforcing [yes/no] and reinforce_rate_multiplier to the spawn unit effect.
- Added flag maintenance [yes/no] to the spawn unit effect.
- Added flag looting [yes/no] and can_toggle_looting [yes/no] to the spawn unit effect.
- Added trigger is_allowed_to_loot.
- Added on_action on_became_imprisoned_any_reason, that triggers whenever a character becomes imprisoned for any reason.
- Added flag adventurer [yes/no]. Adventure titles work just as temporary titles but do not get destroyed automatically when the holder is in peace. Instead, they are destroyed whenever the holder gains another title or when the holder dies.
- Added effect set_looting and set_can_toggle_looting for units.
- Added character text GetHusbandWifeOpp.
- Added triggers realm_levy_diff, reverse_realm_levy_diff, max_realm_levy_diff and reverse_max_realm_levy_diff.
- Renamed the realm_manpower trigger to realm_levies.
- The break effect now also properly affect tooltips.
- Added effects any_unit, any_army, any_fleet, random_unit, random_army and random_fleet.
- Added trigger any_unit, any_army and any_fleet.
- Added flag seafarer in culture and religion files, helping the AI to determine if coastal provinces is preferred when raiding.
- Added trigger is_seafarer, checking if either the culture or religion have the seafarer flag set.
- Added trigger is_island, checking if the province exists in island_region.txt.
- Added event target most_participating_crusader, used to get the most participating non-theocracy attacker in a war.
- Added on_action on_divorce, which fires whenever a character gets divorced regardless of the reason.
- Quick triggers are now properly checked when you fire an event from another event.
- Added triggers is_[law/government/decision/targetted_decision/title_decision/settlement_decision]_[valid/potential] with parameters key, character, title and settlement.
- Added effects and triggers any_dejure_liege and any_defacto_liege.
- Added event target defacto_liege_title.
- Added effect destroy_settlement.
- Added effect make_primary_settlement.
- Added match_settlement to the spawn unit effect.
- Added event trigger 'log'.
- Earmarked units can now also use the $CULTURE$ parameter.
- Added trigger completely_controls_region.
- Added any_title effect.
- Added effects make_capital_holding and revoke_capital_holding.
- Added trigger is_nomadic.
- Added government trigger.
- The Spawn Unit effect can now take saved event targets as parameters.
- Added nomad flag to the create_title effect.
- Added effect convert_to_nomad and convert_to_fort.
- Added flags ai_fabricate_claims to religion groups.
- Added flags attacking_same_religion_piety_loss and uses_decadence to religions. Decadence will be used if the religion AND government of a character is scripted to use decadece.
- Added flags hire_cost and maintenance_multiplier to retinue subunits.
- Added event scopes [strongest/weakest]_clan_vassal, [strongest/weakest]_clan, [strongest/weakest]_clan_vassal_except_me and [strongest/weakest]_clan_except_me, determined by the number of empty holdings they hold.
- Added event scopes [most/least]_prestigious_clan_vassal, [most/least]_prestigious_clan, [most/least]_prestigious_clan_vassal_except_me and [most/least]_prestigious_clan_except_me.
- Added event scopes [most/least]_populous_clan_vassal, [most/least]_populous_clan, [most/least]_populous_clan_vassal_except_me and [most/least]_populous_clan_except_me.
- Added triggers clan_satisfaction, total_manpower, unused_manpower, raised_manpower, max_manpower, manpower_growth, population, max_population, population_growth, population_and_manpower, max_population_and_manpower and population_and_manpower_growth.
- Added effects manpower and population.
- Added trigger uses_decadence.
- Added nand-trigger.
- Not-triggers will now do a script assert if it contains more than one trigger (where the use of nand- and nor-triggers are recommended to be used instead), but will work as previously.
- Added trade_post_has_building and trade_post_has_any_building triggers.
- Added trigger is_settlement_type_allowed.
- Added effects create_fort, destroy_fort, seize_fort, random_fort and any_fort.
- Added triggers any_fort, num_of_forts, num_of_forts_diff, has_fort, fort_has_building and fort_has_any_building.
- Added event scope trade_post_owner.
- Added trigger has_castle, has_temple, has_city and has_tribal.
- Added trigger has_settlement_construction.
- Added triggers is_[law/government/decision/targetted_decision/title_decision/settlement_decision/trade_post_decision/fort_decision]_[allowed/potential].
- Added triggers num_of_[subrealm/demesne]_[castles/cities/temples/tribes/empty_provinces].
- Added trigger holding_diff.
- Added effects set_title_landless, set_title_adventurer and set_title_nomad.
- Added forbidden_raid_target opinion modifier, which disallows looting against that character.
- Job action script can now properly use the various job title event scopes.
- Added triggers has_feud_with and any_feud_rival_clan.
- Added triggers clan_opinion, reverse_clan_opinion, their_clan_opinion, clan_opinion_diff and reverse_clan_opinion_diff.
- Added is_high_prio flag to minor titles, determining whether an alert should be shown or not if that title is available to grant.
- Added triggers num_of_king_titles_in_realm, num_of_duke_titles_in_realm, num_of_count_titles_in_realm, num_of_baron_titles_in_realm, num_of_titles_in_realm.
- Added effect unsafe_give_minor_title.
- Added modifiers clan_sentiment, max_manpower, max_manpower_mult, max_population, max_population_mult, manpower_growth and population_growth, currently applicable on characters and the capital.
- Added modifiers retinue_maintenence_cost and horde_maintenence_cost, currently applicable on characters, family palaces and the capital.
- Added is_active_trigger to buildings. Any modifier from buildings that are not considered active will not apply until the is_active_trigger is properly validated.
- Added modifier global_winter_supply, currently applicable on the capital.
- commander_limit can now be scripted in buildings for capital settlements, increasing the number of commanders a ruler can have.
- moved_capital_months_mult can now be scripted for capital buildings and modifies the delay for how often one can change capital, if their government allows for more frequent switching than once per lifetime.
- The set_defacto_liege effect now works on titles as well.
- Added on_actions on_battle_won_owner and on_battle_lost_owner.
- Added modifiers global_trade_route_wealth, global_trade_route_value, global_tradevalue and global_tradevalue_mult, applicable on the capital of holders of a trade post.
- Trade post buildings will now also have an effect in the capital settlement, not only the family palace.
- Fixed bug where the targetted decision filters realm and sub_realm did not properly check the court of the top liege or the current character.
- Added trigger religion_allows_female_temple_holders.
- The spawn_unit effect will now spawn units on any other unit if there is no other valid location (instead of not spawning the units at all).

So, modders delight! What else have I got for you? Well, here's a selection off the top of my head...
  • You can now, at any time, move prisoners between the Oubliette, House Arrest and the Dungeon.
  • Banishment of landed characters has been changed so that they are only forced to abdicate to their current heir. You no longer get to seize all of their titles.
  • Tribal counties are now more viable targets for raiding (there is more loot there)
  • The names of opinion modifiers are shown in effect tooltips (instead of just "Opinion Changes by -10", etc)

That is it for now... More to come next week!
 
Well it's not that the world is round it's that the sun rather than the earth is at the centre of the solar system that they don't like. But yeah that makes little sense for non christians.
Why so? The sphericity of Earth was known since at least Aristotle in mediterranean europe. If there is ignorant clergy who cling to his basic intuitions and so claims Earth is plain, this can happen in an religion. Such obtuse clergy can be irritated by claims of sphericity too, whatever the creed.

So why would specifically make no sense as norse? Is the sphericity of Earth widely held true in rwligious twxts, myths, or something else,which would not be open to controversy?

Edit: And the same could be asked with respect to heliocentrism. Why would that make no sense for a non-christian (or perhapd, non-abrahamic)

The first discovery that the earth was round and rotated around the sun was discovered multiple times before Christianity and was suppressed by both the scientific community and their respective pagan churches because it threat because it was not the same as their religious texts at the time.
 
The first discovery that the earth was round and rotated around the sun was discovered multiple times before Christianity and was suppressed by both the scientific community and their respective pagan churches because it threat because it was not the same as their religious texts at the time.

The scientific comunity? Not the astronomical One, do you mean right? And what do you mean by pagan churches? Which religions are you refering here too specifically?

Moreover, the translation movement of earth around the d'un was NOT discovered once, let alone several times, in the pagan europe. The only remotely similar things were some theories and speculations, like the ones of Hipsrcus, and perhaps some islàmic astronomy school (my history of astronomy is getting rusty, bit of that much I'm sure, of you have sources pointing inother directions, I'd be very interesting in checking t'hem, but perhaps we are derailing the thread a bit too much....
 
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Why so? The sphericity of Earth was known since at least Aristotle in mediterranean europe. If there is ignorant clergy who cling to his basic intuitions and so claims Earth is plain, this can happen in an religion. Such obtuse clergy can be irritated by claims of sphericity too, whatever the creed.

So why would specifically make no sense as norse? Is the sphericity of Earth widely held true in rwligious twxts, myths, or something else,which would not be open to controversy?

Edit: And the same could be asked with respect to heliocentrism. Why would that make no sense for a non-christian (or perhapd, non-abrahamic)
Because pagans didn't have a formalised structure of beliefs. So while yes most pagans did belive the world was flat and the sun moving around it they would have been less likely to do what the pope did to gallileo. Some people belive the sun is in the centre so ok who cares would have been the reaction. They may have considered the guy crazy but not a threat.

No reason it makes less sense for norse, it makes no sense for anyone without an orginized clergy. And the event is about heliocentrism not about flat versus round earth.
 
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The first discovery that the earth was round and rotated around the sun was discovered multiple times before Christianity and was suppressed by both the scientific community and their respective pagan churches because it threat because it was not the same as their religious texts at the time.
Pagans don't have religious texts, their religion was one of oral tradition. The writings we have are very late and more of an attempt to preserve the stories as they were told at a specific time and place than actuall religious texts. Most pagans would probably have thought you crazy for suggesting the world was round but there was no religious athority to persecute you. And non pagans did not belive the world was flat. They were very well aware that it was round, they however belived that the earth was in the centre on the universe.
 
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The scientific comunity? Not the astronomical One, do you mean right? And what do you mean by pagan churches? Which religions are you refering here too specifically?

Moreover, the translation movement of earth around the d'un was NOT discovered once, let alone several times, in the pagan europe. The only remotely similar things were some theories and speculations, like the ones of Hipsrcus, and perhaps some islàmic astronomy school (my history of astronomy is getting rusty, bit of that much I'm sure, of you have sources pointing inother directions, I'd be very interesting in checking t'hem, but perhaps we are derailing the thread a bit too much....
Well at the time of gallileo it was a known truth that the world was round. He was persecuted for heliocentrism. I don't know how long the christians were aware of that before him but the pagans as you say belived in a flat world (at least the norse ones).
 
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Well at the time of gallileo it was a known truth that the world was round. He was persecuted for heliocentrism. I don't know how long the christians were aware of that before him but the pagans as you say belived in a flat world (at least the norse ones).

Actually Galileo was persecuted because he was anti-papal... and because he didn't had good evidences for his theory. Actually... there were some medieval priests and scholars who try to claim heliocentrism. But they don't had enought evidences to replace the geocentrism. (And yes with medieval knowledge and without helpful things like binoculars etc it was possible to scientific explain geocentrism).
 
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I'd like a source on that gallileo's data was insufficient. You don't thrash one of the greatest minds of history without backing that up. Especially considering the conclusions that gallileo drew were almost correct (he predicted circular motions of the planets while we of course now know them to be elliptical).
 
I'd like a source on that gallileo's data was insufficient. You don't thrash one of the greatest minds of history without backing that up. Especially considering the conclusions that gallileo drew were almost correct (he predicted circular motions of the planets while we of course now know them to be elliptical).

I don't say Galileo was wrong. I just said that he couldn't prove his claims enough. Actually the pope was even a supporter of Galileo as first... until Galileo fooled him (accidently or intented we don't know)

Oh and you know that one of the most important arguments for Galileo was the tides? Actually... Isaac Newton was the one who could prove that heliocentrism is the right model. And after this Pope Benedict XIV removed the ban of Galileo posthumously.
 
I don't say Galileo was wrong. I just said that he couldn't prove his claims enough. Actually the pope was even a supporter of Galileo as first... until Galileo fooled him (accidently or intented we don't know)

Oh and you know that one of the most important arguments for Galileo was the tides? Actually... Isaac Newton was the one who could prove that heliocentrism is the right model. And after this Pope Benedict XIV removed the ban of Galileo posthumously.
Isaac newton figured out the eliptical orbits but like most of his 'discoveries' someone else had suggested it before him. Newton is great because he figured out how things came together but very little of his work is original.
 
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Kepler figured out elliptical orbits. I never saw that attributed to Newton.
 
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Well it's not that the world is round it's that the sun rather than the earth is at the centre of the solar system that they don't like. But yeah that makes little sense for non christians.

Makes little sense in general. It is a well known historical fact that nobody in the medieval period believed the earth was flat.
 
I'd like a source on that gallileo's data was insufficient. You don't thrash one of the greatest minds of history without backing that up. Especially considering the conclusions that gallileo drew were almost correct (he predicted circular motions of the planets while we of course now know them to be elliptical).

"Galileo was persecuted because the Church hated science and felt threatened by heliocentrism" is an old myth. Moreover Galileo was ironically a devou Catholic who had ample opportunity to escape italy but decided to face the inquisition. He was however somewhat of a spoied brat who threw a hissy fit that eventually led to all the drama. Remember he was not the first to write about Heliocentrism, Copernicus has that honor and he had no problems(in fact his book was dedicated to the pope).

http://www.astronomynotes.com/history/GalileoAffair.html

http://www.unav.es/cryf/galileoaffair.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/matt-j-rossano/christian-church-science-history_b_932986.html
 
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I think if you could play as a courtier, declare an adventure and, if you were lowborn, fabricate evidence of a noble house (like the ones generated by inviting a noble to court)
 
Actually it was an Islamic polymath who laid some of the groundwork for heliocentrism. I'll try and find his name.

Nasir al-Din al-Tusi was the one I was thinking of, though it turns out a lot of people have come close before Copernicus.

If "coming close" or "laying the groundwork" counted in cases like this, then Newton vs Libnitz for who invented/discovered calculus is won squarely by Archimedes.

Edit: Also plz, if not in this thread then in the next dev diary, let's see some of those cultural/religious/de jure maps!
 
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