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Crusader Kings 3 Dev Diary #53 - Northern Lords Content Rundown

Crusader Kings 3 Dev Diary #53 - Northern Lords Content Rundown​

Welcome comrades, to a very odd diary for me to be writing!

Today, we’re going to be taking a look at what new scripted content we’ve added for CK3: the Northern Lords, and, since it’s been out and playable for a week, I thought it’d be fun to go a little bit into some of the design rationales we had and my personal perspective on some of the feedback so far.

Writing for the Vikings​

Tackling the Norse was always going to be an interesting affair, since, mechanically, they’re pretty well covered for many things already, though most especially warfare and raiding.

Accordingly, this meant that, for this flavour pack, we needed to try and dive more into the daily lives of rural Scandinavians. Other than raiding and reaving across the waterways of the world, what did they get up to? What were their folk beliefs? How did they raise their children? What might you find happening on a lazy summer afternoon at a remote Nordic court?

In short, how could we make tribal North Germanics come alive in ways other than running an efficient kleptocracy?

Initially, we had intended to keep the focus tightly wrapped to rural Scandinavia, but the more reading and research that was done, the more it became apparent that we were going to have to tackle the Scandinavian colonies and adventurer realms elsewhere. Just as long as we kept everything mostly historically plausible, staying within feasibility as much as we could.

With some exce-*cough*Mann*cough*-ptions.

Raid-Trade Events​

When leading raiding expeditions, rulers with the longboats innovation may occasionally get events allowing them to stop and trade with the locals. This gives them some loot, and a ceasefire with their target (or their target’s liege) if accepted.

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We added this because we were quite keen on showing that, for all that they raided extensively, the Norse were just as often traders as looters. That said, keen-eyed observers will note that much weaker holdings are always raided, with only holdings that are a significant challenge for the raiding army potentially getting the softer option.

The Norse may have traded almost as often as they raided, but either choice was fundamentally motivated by practicality, not ethics.

Retrospective​

These were scripted early and intended to be something of a minor feature, just adding a little extra depth and flavour to Norse raiding. I really didn’t anticipate how much both QA and the public would enjoy getting more complex raiding options, though, and if I could go back and expand on any one feature, man, this’d be it.

Scandinavian Adventurer System​

One thing that the Swedish AI really, really loves to do in the base title is collect holiday homes. Ireland, France, Spain, Sardinia, Stoke-on-Trent… if it’s vaguely near a coast, Sweden wants a piece of that action. Preferably just a small piece. For the collection.

We wanted to improve on that by giving a more guided experience for Scandinavian expansion during the Viking Age, something aesthetically pleasing that models historical paths of expansion.

Thus: the Scandinavian Adventurer system.

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As lords in Scandinavia lose their last holding, they’re added to a pile of other such rulers, from which we select someone every X years. Then, looking down a list of major areas of Norse colonial interest (two lists, technically: one for the west, one for the east), we check to see how the Norse are doing. If we find somewhere in the lists where the Norse presence is either gone or else negligible, we grab one of our landless Scandinavian warlords and send them off to conquer anew.

The intent here was to make something that meant you couldn’t simply push the Norse out of a certain area and assume they’d stay out, whilst not ending up with tiny Norwegian, Swedish, and Danish exclaves scattered across the world. Instead, we get lots of minor/moderate Scandinavian adventurers, raiding and attacking opportunistically in their areas of interest, and generally harrying people as small bandit lordships till the Viking Age passes and things begin to calm down.

Fun fact: the Apocalyptic Scandinavian Adventurers game rule setting was initially just for testing purposes. I left it in for a bit of fun, but QA kept coming back after playtesting and telling us how it wasn’t truly apocalyptic enough, and how they expected more, and worse, etc., etc. So uhhh, that’s how we got to have several perfectly sane settings and one that leads to mass border-gore and terrifying Viking emigres marauding across Europe.

The Scandinavian Adventurers system also includes various other minor mixed mechanics; there’s the attached decision for rulers to go native (though they’ll still count as vikings for the purposes of the system, at least till they die), special exceptions to ensure famous vikings get booted up the list if they lose their last county unexpectedly (looking at you, Haesteinn, you terrifying old man), and an auto-grabber that checks for Rollo & Ubbe after a certain period and, if they’re not tied down, throws them out in the world to go a-conquering.

Last but not least, the weighting system for selecting adventurers also prioritises player relations, meaning that, if you’re playing within Scandinavia and throw a rival out of their lands entirely, you may not have quite seen the last of ‘em...

Retrospective​

If I could pick any one thing to change about this? The name. Having two separate, but related, adventurer systems was not the smartest idea. Not so bad from a player’s perspective, as all the adventurers just blend together, but having to specify which type of adventurer you mean when designing is just a little annoying :p.

It could also do with a little more variety in attack date, and perhaps feed notifications for visibility. Maybe someday.

Yearly Events​

The Northern Lords includes a little over 40 mixed yearly events, reflecting a broad cocktail of Scandinavian living: rural mythologising, child-rearing, the impact of raids and slave-taking, and aspects of performative Norse honour like nithings and shieldmaidens. We’ve got holmgangs and hofs, whales and warriors, conversions and curses, all trying to approach different core and esoteric aspects of Nordic life.

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Part of the reason for focusing on small-scale rural living was to try and promote a feeling of being a down-to-earth lordling at the edge of the world, dealing with concerns both petty and practical. Sure, you need to go out raiding and bring back loot for your capital, but you’ve also got to deal with tensions between your elite warrior class and the freeholder farmers that work the land whilst you’re gone, or the monsters that the smallfolk tell themselves stalk the forests at night...

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Into this, we added a mix of historically-inspired events (like an explorer fresh from the depths of the Atlantic), relatable life events (I know I can empathise with struggling to stay awake at a meeting that’s running too long), and some experimental events (like the nithing pole whodunnit).


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Jomsvikings​

As an unreformed holy order that’s uniquely much easier to found than usual (and which happens automagically even if no characters gets around to such), the Jomsvikings offer some interesting benefits to both their founder (including an event army) and to Norse pagans as a whole.

To balance that, we wanted the Jomsvikings to be, basically, bastards.

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They’re religious fundamentalists and they’re unhappy that no one is quite as serious as them about the old ways: everyone’s either in a rush to reform, which is heresy, or a rush to convert away, which is apostasy.

They take it on themselves to roam the Baltic and other areas, rewarding the pious and stealing from literally everyone else, and will continue making a nuisance of themselves against all comers until Jomsberg itself is burnt to the ground.

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Shieldmaidens​

Returning in triumph from CK2, for CK3, we knew we wanted to have shieldmaidens be somewhat fewer in number (CK2 tended to inflate them) but also be more impactful as a result. Thus, CK3’s shieldmaidens can save you from various types of assassination, grow deadlier the more battles they’re in via the acquisition of special modifiers, and are more likely to turn up in general events than their CK2 counterparts.

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This is balanced by the modifier progression event’s cooldown being set per host, not per shieldmaiden. If you do acquire lots of shieldmaidens, they’ll level markedly slower than one or two truly legendary ones, allowing the player to choose between widespread shieldmaidenry and a few names that echo through the ages.

Needless to say, we’re also quite happy to be bringing gender-neutral shieldmaidenry to CK for the first time with the alternate version, the shieldswain, accessible for female-dominated Norse pagans.

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Decisions​

Secure the High Kingdom of the North Sea​

What needs to be said for forming an empire in the North Sea? In its day, this was tried numerous times, and though each successive polity tended to be incredibly powerful, they never outlasted the short lives of their rulers.

By living long enough to complete the process of formally tying the kingdoms together within a single lifetime, you can do what Canute the Great could not, and make the binding permanent.

Our portrayal of the High Kingdom is thus very much alternate history, but it’s still somewhat plausible alternate history, and thus we tried to keep the requirements and outcomes somewhat feasible whilst still letting them vary according to exactly who is taking the decision.

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Unreformed tribals get an easy conversion to feudalism and a modifier that not only helps them live long enough to use it, it makes it so that you lose minimal power transitioning out of tribal.

Reformed pagans get a modifier that makes it markedly easier to convert other reformed faiths, letting them propagate their faith around the realm with impunity.

Everyone else gets a strong hook on every powerful vassal with a positive opinion of them which is, understandably, both profitable and stabilising.

Needless to say, no matter which path you go, you get a cool nickname.

Found the Capital of the Rus’​

In the 9th century, the rise of the Rus’ is just beginning, and though a glorious future is certainly on the way, exactly what future is up for grabs.

We wanted to put the player in the driving seat for this by letting them choose where the heart of the Rus’ truly lays, setting the de jure capital for Russia by their actions in much the same way Helgi the Seer would do after Rurik’s death.

In addition to setting Russia’s de jure capital, this decision also gives a hefty development boost and a marked long-term increase to local taxes and levies, making it a decision that you can form a strong core realm around.

Retrospective​

… That said, we could probably make the instant development-gain into a growth-over-time instead. Development gain is a really great, tangible reward, and the actual effect should stay at roughly the same level, but it certainly does produce some weird parallels with other major development hubs if you rush it in the 9th century.

Elevate the Kingdom of Mann & the Isles​

Oh boi, have I seen some mixed opinions on this’un! Elevating Mann gives you so many bonuses scattered all over the place, most of them extremely good, and it’s easily one of the more powerful decisions in the title (which, given it has to catch the Isle of Mann up as a major world player, it sorta has to be). Your whole dynasty gets to raid for a hundred years despite it making you feudal (something we otherwise heavily restrict), you get a large pirate army with many free Men-at-Arms, you get lots of renown, and the Isle of Mann is made into an absolute powerhouse of a county.

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Remember when I said at the start of the diary that we generally wanted to stay historically plausible? Well, that’s very true, and everywhere else we’ve tried to stick quite hard to, at the least, a valid interpretation of historical evidence.

Elevating Mann is the one major exception we allowed (and a big shout out to everyone who’s already found the other, more-hidden major exception and are readying their corrective posts right now, but shhhhhh, let people find it by themselves). It’s dumb, it’s fun, it’s for bringing out your inner pirate-monarch and stealing the wealth of the world away.

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Retrospective​

… It probably could use a gold-looted requirement, though.

Religious Changes​

Blots​

Blots are an interesting conundrum, and one we took quite a few risks with this DLC.

In CK2, they were heavily modelled after the account of Adam of Bremen, an 11th century German bishop and chronicler who specialised in, amongst other things, Scandinavian accounts. They’re fun, but they also require a lot of micro to get the most out of them, and paint a very human sacrifice-happy view of Norse paganism that Adam of Bremen certainly agreed with, but which has somewhat more mixed archaeological evidence.

For CK3, then, we wanted to reduce the inherent micro involved in prisoner selection & acquisition, and give the option to throw a grand blot without needing to ensure at least an optimal number of prisoners. Our version is, instead, based on Adam of Bremen, reports from the sagas, contemporary archaeology, and some input from relevant medievalists.

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Thus, rather than raising money and eliminating prisoners, throwing a colossal feast costs money but brings the realm together by doling out popular and vassal opinion.

The player is also always assumed to have enough thralls and petty prisoners to hand to be able to put on a decent human sacrifice if they want to, but can still throw a helluva party even just using animals. Instead, we make a larger deal about selecting a particularly noteworthy sacrifice to take centre-stage, and keep this as optional throughout.

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Per several accounts, even rulers not of the faith can hold great blots to please their blot-faith vassals and lands, though they must be careful not to upset their co-faithists. Particularly if they plan to indulge the blot’s most vicious customs.

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One small bit of flavour I quite like about blots is that they’re responsive to dietary needs: different syncretisms and religions will filter out sacred or unclean animals so that they’re no longer served, and those who prefer their food more intelligent likewise have slightly different sacrifice loc.

Select Personal God​

An extension of vanilla’s Bhakti tenet, selecting a personal god lets characters choose a patron deity whose worship guides their life and attracts relevant specialists to their side.

I’ve got to say, of these, my all-time favourite has to be selecting Ullr. I know Odin is generally better and more versatile, and Thor has the catchier theme tune, but extra winter movement speed from leading an army that devoutly worships the god of skis tickles me so much.

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Retrospective​

Originally, this was going to be a much more diverse selection of gods, divided according to local cults from around Scandinavia. Unfortunately, during the research phase of production, we turned up a paucity of sources on the specifics of Norse pagan worship. Since the choice was to go with almost entirely what’s presented in the Eddas or to scale back the feature a bit, we chose to try to cleave to reliable history, and scale back the feature.

A little part of this original functionality still survives in the form of Tyr and Ullr being mutually exclusive for Danes and non-Danes respectively, a division which is moderately supported by current studies in place name archaeology.

Holy Sites​

One of our largest changes in 1.3 is shifting the Norse pagan holy sites around, removing the two from Denmark and Holland and shifting them instead to York and Kiev.

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This was partly for balance (Norse paganism has some of the strongest holy sites in the game clustered in an easily defensible area), partly to make it a bit more challenging to reform Norse paganism, and partly because these holy sites have been the same since 2013 and not really revisited since the Old Gods launched.

Holland’s claim in particular was extremely dubious compared to York, which, as the focal point for a lot of events around the death of Ragnar Lothbrok (who, whether he was historical or not, forms the background legend for much of Scandinavia’s major nobility) and centre of Scandinavian colonialism in the British Isles, really needed a priority bump.

For the Danish holy site being moved to Russia, we more or less had a straight choice between Novgorod and Kiev. Since part of the rationale was to make it a bit harder to reform the faith, though Novgorod was arguably a more important site, we went with Kiev. Denmark’s claim to having a holy site to begin with is arguable (certainly significantly more than Holland), but not the strongest, especially not compared to Uppsala or, to a lesser extent, Trondheim.

Virtues​

… has anyone else noticed that, since we added One-Eyed as a virtue to Norse paganism, suddenly everyone’s ruler designed characters are all missing an eye? I think we may well have inadvertently drastically reduced the number of eyes in CK3 overall. It’s hilarious.

Including Poet and One Eyed as virtues for Norse paganism is technically part of the free patch, but I think it’s one of my favourite little aspects of flavour in 1.3, and especially the randomised poetry system was scripted very partially so that Norse paganism could regain its signature unique virtue.

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Dynasty Legacies​

As part of the Northern Lords, we’ve added two new dynasty legacies: Adventure, for those who like to wander the world, and Pillage, for those who wish to see it burn.

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Early in the design process, we were initially only going to have one new dynasty legacy, but the perks it ended up with were pretty wildly variable (imagine Wanderlust and Gift-Givers on the same track as Making a Killing and No Quarter).

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We pretty quickly decided that, since we were trying to expand on non-raiding areas of play, we should break the dynasty perks into two separate tracks, so that players could choose one without strictly needing to have both, and so build the Norse legacy that most fits their roleplay.

Regional Innovations & Cultural Mechanics​

Varangian Adventurers​

These are, perhaps, my favourite part of the flavour pack! Varangian Adventures allow independent Norse rulers to pick up sticks and, along with a small army of followers, move their entire realm to another part of the world, abandoning their old holdings for pastures new.

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This has been something that I, personally, have wanted to do in Crusader Kings for years, but previous methods have always required you to manually lose your old holdings and it’s honestly just a bit of a chore. Being able to do it automatically whilst gaining an event army, and so build my own version of Haesteinn or Rurik, is so much fun.

It’s also been an absolute delight to see pictures of other people’s adventurer empires, with Norsemen ending up anywhere from Ceylon to the Sahara, and we love seeing players get into the spirit of wandering the world.

All-Things​

Since the Norse tend to swim in prestige but can struggle feudalising, All-Things are intended to allow you to equalise these two somewhat. By losing much of your excess prestige, you can transition up and down the realm authority rungs much easier, making for a smoother process if you want to change laws in a hurry.

A couple of our yearlies are also tied to the possession of this innovation, either yourself, or by your counties.

Retrospective​

I quite like the dynamic with All-Things, effectively loosening some of feudalisation’s harsh requirements, but feel they could perhaps have done with a few more events to make such a notable feature of the innovation.

Revamping the Raising of Runestones​

Now, I’ve seen a lot of confusion about runestones out there, so let me clear something up: runestones were (and, in a marginally-improved form, still are) accessible in the base title, fulfilling a very similar role to their CK2 incarnation.

What we’ve done for the Northern Lords, since we happened to be in the neighbourhood of runestones and wanted to give them a little more attention whilst we could, was expand and improve on that original design. For this flavour pack, we made them more responsive to specific scenarios and events that happen in your character’s life, both in terms of triggering and by providing custom flavour for individual runestones related to their contents.

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This lets you make runestones work for your more specific needs, shoring up weak counties and boosting strong ones with selectable, flavourful bonuses.

We uhhh, we may have gone a bit overboard with some of the flavour loc variants though, honestly. I’m not totally convinced that anyone is ever likely to raise a runestone commemorating a Norse Chakravarti or a Norse Greatest of Khans, but hey, if you do, you can bet it’ll be commemorated on their runestone.

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Unless you do both, I suppose. Only so much space in the modifier description on the rock.

Trials-by-Combat​

TbCs! These took the absolute longest time to set up. Not because of the actual interaction, but because we first had to script and localise the single combat system to get a decent implementation. If I recall correctly, localisation for duelling alone wound up at somewhere around 28k words, including dozens of variant ways to die or be injured.

Our intent with Trials-by-Combat was to present something that worked orthogonally to the usual prison system without replacing it. Serious matters should, predominantly, continue to work via the use of imprisonment or factions, but where these two avenues are unavailable, aggrieved parties can agree on a settlement then settle their dispute in a fair fight.

This makes them a little tricky to grok at first, but slots them neatly into an unused gameplay groove once you do. I’ve seen more than a few high-prowess players financing entire civil works programs via TbC cash settlements and, really, who doesn’t like beating someone in a fight so hard they start compulsively telling the truth?

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Men-at-Arms​

The Northern Lords introduced four new MaA types: Bondi, Vigmen, Varangian Veterans, and Jomsviking Pirates. We wanted each of these to be situationally useful, generally a bit more specialist than the standard MaA types, and almost universally better winter fighters.

Bondi are the freeholding smallfolk of the land, the people who make up most of the attendees at the Thing-meets, and are represented as a cheaper (but also somewhat worse) alternative to pikemen.

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Vigmen are professional warriors by trade, but not the most experienced or best equipped. Relying on massed short-range archery and firm shield walls, they’re at their best when fighting massed light infantry.

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Varangian Veterans represent the adventurers, wanderers, and, in later centuries, alumni of the Varangian Guard that permeate Scandinavia. They’re individualistic, they’re deadly, and they charge a frankly exorbitant sum for their services.

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Finally, Jomsviking Pirates are a special MaA type, only given out through events and decisions (usually those involving the Jomsvikings). As skirmishers, they’re fairly easily countered, and they lack a terrain speciality like most other MaA types, but they make up for this by having good all-round states including both pursuit and screening. A force of anarchy on the battlefield, the Jomsvikings come into their own when substituting for a lack of light horse, either harrying the enemy as they flee or covering their comrades as they escape.

With these MaA types, we wanted to cover some (though not all) of the Viking deficiencies in the earlier centuries of the title, whilst still leaving them open to being out-teched by better MaA in the mid to late game.

That’s All Folks!​

:) We hope this has been an interesting dev diary for you, even after release, and don’t forget to drop a screenshot of your Varangian Adventure kingdom in the thread!
 
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We actually had a fair amount of help from someone who was both very interested in this and rather qualified. Whilst I'm sure we'd love to make similar improvements elsewhere in future, like you say, it's really intensive work, and we typically don't have the time to invest in such personally.
Wow, nice to know that. If you consider to do something similar for a "Spanish" Flavor Pack I will be more than glad to provide you with Medieval (mostly 15th century) spelling of Basque names that I have found while researching for my PhD the Books of Revenues that the Hospitaller Priory of Navarra kept.
 
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Thank you for the diary. It is really interesting to hear about your design decisions and the thought you put into each new features. I think a lot of it is also really clever, like the way you fixed swedish expansion while adding a cool new adventure feature.

I cannot wait to see how you continue to expand and improve the game. One thing I would really like to know is how satisfied you are with the balance of the game. I think that the one thing that I would most like to see improved in CK3 is the difficulty. More precisely, it seems that it is not too difficult to reach the rank of emperor, and once you do, I have the impression that most of the challenge disappears from the game and it mostly becomes about painting the map, which is fun, but not really where this game shines. I think the game is at its best when managing difficult vassals and their opinions while also worrying about external threats, or scheming to get what you want, but I feel that there is maybe not enough of that. For example, it is usually very easy to keep vassals in line, and over time they usually all have excellent opinions of me, which also mean that they never try to assassinate me or otherwise throw a wrench in my plan.

Based on this diary, you seem to really take into account the issues of the game into the design of the expansions, and you have great ideas to fix them. I would thus really like to know if those balancing aspects that I mentioned are issues that you would like to improve on over time, or if the game is balanced according to your vision. Of course, I understand that you probably cannot give me a specific answer at this time, but it would be nice to know if this is on your radar or not.
 
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It's a little weird for my character to go around beating up random adulterers in neighboring realms, but I do enjoy the trials-by-combat. I hope the shirtless portraits are going to be fixed, it's hard to take the fights seriously when the fighters look so scrawny.
 
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^^' 'fraid it's a little outside my remit, but I'll raise your post internally and see if there's anything we've not got plans for yet.
That's great since some of these confirmed bugs are quite forgotten from previous versions and we don't have any clue if they'll be fixed at some point.
I really appreciate your help and I hope the raising of this post will make it easier for you and the other Devs to pinpoint previous unresloved issues and inform us about the new ones that came with 1.3 and the flavor pack. I'm sure you already know that new content is always great and we'll happily support it but bug fixing is a heart winner ;)

Have a nice day and thanks again!
 
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I haven't played the new DLC enough to have a say about the changes but these diaries are appreciated. I just wanted to say that as a min-max player myself (i have this illness even in CK2 or cities skylines, withouth mentioning eu4 or stellaris) this game is steering me towards the role-playing as anything else before was able to. And boy i love it! I expect a Netflix series coming out of one of our adventures on CK3 one day...
 
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It's a little weird for my character to go around beating up random adulterers in neighboring realms, but I do enjoy the trials-by-combat. I hope the shirtless portraits are going to be fixed, it's hard to take the fights seriously when the fighters look so scrawny.
The characters are looking scrawny because there is a bug that makes most of them if not all, extremely thin.
Look here if you like.
 
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Good dev diary :)
In your retroperspective you pointed out some points that you are not quite happy with design wise. Is there a chance that you will get to changing them or is the focus now on 1.4 with the next big DLC?
 
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I personally find it really interesting to learn more about the reasoning behind design decisions, so I appreciate dev diaries like this one.

I also have a question about the reasoning behind one design decision that I didn't like as much: Why are the special norse legacies no longer available after the culture split? I know that adventuring and raiding will stop after a while, but the split cultures could also be argued to share the legacy of the norse, and having this time limit on unlocking the first perks of these legacies feels kind of artificial and bad.
 
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Can the North Sea Empire get a more appropriate flag? We know Cnut used the Raven banner in life and the lions and hearts were a later innovation. Also frankly it feels really lame compared to the other great CoA we get in the pack. And it doesn't even change based on faith for that matter.
 
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Can the North Sea Empire get a more appropriate flag? We know Cnut used the Raven banner in life and the lions were a later innovation. Also frankly it feels really lame compared to the other great CoA we get in the pack. And it doesn't even change based on faith for that matter.
It actually has three already - it takes after your primary kingdom, defaulting to Denmark if it's not England or Norway.
 
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Could this be adjusted through the localization system? People should really not refer to themselves as "petty king".
Preach! I'd certainly like to see this changed (love me some petty kings/queens, do not like to see them putting themselves down all the time), but I'm afraid I'm unsure quite where we landed on this.
Will efforts be made to update the database Norse and Norwegian characters to reflect the culture name list changes?
Potentially at some point, but I'm afraid it's quite low on the priority list, sad to say.
Thank you for the diary. It is really interesting to hear about your design decisions and the thought you put into each new features. I think a lot of it is also really clever, like the way you fixed swedish expansion while adding a cool new adventure feature.

I cannot wait to see how you continue to expand and improve the game. One thing I would really like to know is how satisfied you are with the balance of the game. I think that the one thing that I would most like to see improved in CK3 is the difficulty. More precisely, it seems that it is not too difficult to reach the rank of emperor, and once you do, I have the impression that most of the challenge disappears from the game and it mostly becomes about painting the map, which is fun, but not really where this game shines. I think the game is at its best when managing difficult vassals and their opinions while also worrying about external threats, or scheming to get what you want, but I feel that there is maybe not enough of that. For example, it is usually very easy to keep vassals in line, and over time they usually all have excellent opinions of me, which also mean that they never try to assassinate me or otherwise throw a wrench in my plan.

Based on this diary, you seem to really take into account the issues of the game into the design of the expansions, and you have great ideas to fix them. I would thus really like to know if those balancing aspects that I mentioned are issues that you would like to improve on over time, or if the game is balanced according to your vision. Of course, I understand that you probably cannot give me a specific answer at this time, but it would be nice to know if this is on your radar or not.
It's tough for me to give you much of a concrete answer here, because we have quite a few people on the team and everyone has their own likes, dislikes, and general preferences. Personally, I'd love to see more in the way of instability and inherent difficulty in running larger empires, but we do have to keep in mind that there are lots of different valid playstyles for CK3 and what's pure gravy to one person can be pure poison to the next. Especially with sweeping balance changes, that's always gotta be in the back of our minds.

That said, I suspect it'll always be somewhat easy to game some of the more egregious systems in CK, even if we got the balance otherwise perfect for most players. It's as much a roleplaying game as anything else, and that means that so much of it only really opens up when you let yourself play sub-optimally for the fun of it to stay in character (which, in my opinion, the stress system has done so much towards gamifying in a meaningful way). That doesn't mean there aren't improvements we can make to make it more fun to stay IC, gods know I think everyone has a long list of things they'd love to add/adjust, but I don't think we're ever likely to stop it being possible to powergame your way to map painting with a little work.
It's a little weird for my character to go around beating up random adulterers in neighboring realms, but I do enjoy the trials-by-combat. I hope the shirtless portraits are going to be fixed, it's hard to take the fights seriously when the fighters look so scrawny.
:) I believe we're looking into this.
Good dev diary :)
In your retroperspective you pointed out some points that you are not quite happy with design wise. Is there a chance that you will get to changing them or is the focus now on 1.4 with the next big DLC?
I can't comment fully on patching/DLC strategy, but I will say that one of the things I love about working on Paradox projects is that we have such an insanely long tail. Many things are never-say-never, and just because we weren't able to get to something this version, it doesn't mean we won't get a chance to look at in the next, or the one after that, or the one after that. :D I know I've still got stuff I wanted to get in pre-release that I hope may yet see the light of day.
I personally find it really interesting to learn more about the reasoning behind design decisions, so I appreciate dev diaries like this one.

I also have a question about the reasoning behind one design decision that I didn't like as much: Why are the special norse legacies no longer available after the culture split? I know that adventuring and raiding will stop after a while, but the split cultures could also be argued to share the legacy of the norse, and having this time limit on unlocking the first perks of these legacies feels kind of artificial and bad.
Hmmmm, that just sounds like a bug, I'm afraid. The legacies are accessed by either following a Germanic religion or possessing the longboats innovation: not only should Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish retain access, I'm pretty sure Estonian should have 'em too.
Can the North Sea Empire get a more appropriate flag? We know Cnut used the Raven banner in life and the lions were a later innovation. Also frankly it feels really lame compared to the other great CoA we get in the pack. And it doesn't even change based on faith for that matter.
I've seen a few people bring this up, so I can say that it's on our radar, though I'm afraid I can make no promises.. The simple explanation here is we got the Norse-faith CoAs after we got the North Sea CoAs, so we didn't leave the North Sea out on purpose. More just an accident of production.
 
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Trials-by-Combat​

TbCs! These took the absolute _longest_ time to set up. Not because of the actual interaction, but because we first had to script and localise the single combat system to get a decent implementation. If I recall correctly, localisation for duelling alone wound up at somewhere around 28k words, including dozens of variant ways to die or be injured.

Our intent with Trials-by-Combat was to present something that worked orthogonally to the usual prison system without replacing it. Serious matters should, predominantly, continue to work via the use of imprisonment or factions, but where these two avenues are unavailable, aggrieved parties can agree on a settlement then settle their dispute in a fair fight.

This makes them a little tricky to grok at first, but slots them neatly into an unused gameplay groove once you do. I’ve seen more than a few high-prowess players financing entire civil works programs via TbC cash settlements and, really, who doesn’t like beating someone in a fight so hard they start compulsively telling the truth?
Man, this description of trial by combat makes no sense to me. The only thing I've been able to do with trials by combat is go duel random adulterers in far away realms. How am I an "aggrieved party" there? Why is this person paying me money? The idea that players are going around Scandinavia beating up strangers and earning more money than they would from years of taxes strikes me as a glaring design failure, not a feature.
 
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Hmmmm, that just sounds like a bug, I'm afraid. The legacies are accessed by either following a Germanic religion or possessing the longboats innovation: not only should Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish retain access, I'm pretty sure Estonian should have 'em too.

Thank you for clarifying this. Tying it to religion or longboats would make much more sense. :)

Currently, it is just norse though:

Code:
fp1_adventure_legacy_track = {
    is_shown = {
        has_fp1_dlc_trigger = yes
        dynasty = {
            OR = {
                dynast = {
                    has_culture = culture:norse
                }
                has_dynasty_perk = fp1_adventure_legacy_1
            }
        }
    }
}

fp1_pillage_legacy_track = {
    is_shown = {
        has_fp1_dlc_trigger = yes
        dynasty = {
            OR = {
                dynast = {
                    has_culture = culture:norse
                }
                has_dynasty_perk = fp1_pillage_legacy_1
            }
        }
    }
}
 
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I don't think we're ever likely to stop it being possible to powergame your way to map painting with a little work.
The problem is right now is that it barely takes any work once you get to a certain size. Vassals wanting to put a rival claimant on your throne are a bigger challenge that trying to maintain a large empire. I love big empires but it would be nice if more friction was added in the larger you get. I'll usually get quit a game if I get large enough because there is no challenge and not enough to do other than conquer more.
 
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It's tough for me to give you much of a concrete answer here, because we have quite a few people on the team and everyone has their own likes, dislikes, and general preferences. Personally, I'd love to see more in the way of instability and inherent difficulty in running larger empires, but we do have to keep in mind that there are lots of different valid playstyles for CK3 and what's pure gravy to one person can be pure poison to the next. Especially with sweeping balance changes, that's always gotta be in the back of our minds.

That said, I suspect it'll always be somewhat easy to game some of the more egregious systems in CK, even if we got the balance otherwise perfect for most players. It's as much a roleplaying game as anything else, and that means that so much of it only really opens up when you let yourself play sub-optimally for the fun of it to stay in character (which, in my opinion, the stress system has done so much towards gamifying in a meaningful way). That doesn't mean there aren't improvements we can make to make it more fun to stay IC, gods know I think everyone has a long list of things they'd love to add/adjust, but I don't think we're ever likely to stop it being possible to powergame your way to map painting with a little work.
I think the balance issues are not so much that you can find clever exploits, but that it's basically impossible to not feel like you're exploiting things in the normal course of play. Dread is a common example - it's very easy to, without even thinking about gaining dread, execute a few troublesome prisoners, and find that your entire realm is cowering in fear and you never have to worry about a revolt again. This isn't fun - you have to actively avoid gaining dread if you want to experience the gameplay of managing realm stability.

More on topic for this dev diary, consider the Great Blot mechanic. If you sacrifice gold and people, and pick the option at the end that gives you a bonus to vassal relations, you get a net +50 opinion modifier with every single vassal. That's enough that it basically doesn't matter what else you've done to please or offend your vassals. Maybe you'll have one or two that's incredibly disgruntled because you killed their father or something, but +50 with everyone is again enough to ensure you simply don't have to worry about realm stability. It basically turns off an entire section of the game, and it happens if you just play the new content at face value. There's no clever exploit here, or metagame strategizing. You just click the button the event gives you and oops you don't get to play realm management anymore!
 
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Remember when I said at the start of the diary that we generally wanted to stay historically plausible? Well, that’s very true, and everywhere else we’ve tried to stick quite hard to, at the least, a valid interpretation of historical evidence.

Elevating Mann is the one major exception we allowed (and a big shout out to everyone who’s already found the other, more-hidden major exception and are readying their corrective posts right now, but shhhhhh, let people find it by themselves). It’s dumb, it’s fun, it’s for bringing out your inner pirate-monarch and stealing the wealth of the world away.

Okay now I am extremely curious
 
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The characters are looking scrawny because there is a bug that makes most of them if not all, extremely thin.
Look here if you like.
I'm guessing it's less of a bug and more of a work in progress. Clothed characters intentionally use a skinny body so they don't clip through their clothes, and they made sleeveless and shirtless outfits use this body even though it looks bad.
 
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What about having the varangian adventurers mechanic applied to all tribes? It reminds me of the Migration Age, Slavs migrating into Balkan during Heraclian dynasty, Such tradition survives among nomads until as late as 1771, when Ubashi Khan led his Torghuts back to Dzungaria.
 
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I'm guessing it's less of a bug and more of a work in progress. Clothed characters intentionally use a skinny body so they don't clip through their clothes, and they made sleeveless and shirtless outfits use this body even though it looks bad.
Yeah probably. It's not working as intended atm, that's for sure.