After playing several campaigns, thought I'd share some pointers
1. Death or capture of a general should hit the morale and War score as well.
2. If you have a family member of the person you are fighting, it should also count in the War Score (had the daughter of the King I was fighting in my court, but didn't have any effect).
3. If the person you are fighting dies half way through the campaign, there should be a huge hit on the War Score as well, especially if the person taking over is bad militarily and not of same line (not brother, son, etc...)
4. When taking over provinces, capital should also be much more valuable (the War Score uptick is negligible)
5. When Sieging, it should give you the option of what dwelling to siege.
6. If one county has several dwellings, one should only "control" the province until you have more than half of them
7. Peace Processes. Instead of being absolute peace for your CB, there should be mid point once you're War Score is over a certain percentage, the peace offering is tempting to accept (give titles, money, hand in marriage of a son/daughter to stop the campaign)
Case in point: In a War to lower crown authority in Aragon, I pretty much won a dozen battles and controlled three provinces (including the capital at the time) but my War Score was still only about 50%. My +40k army had been diminished to about 15k, but had pretty much destroyed my King's army and was trying to up the War Score with sieges. Wasn't enough. He called in the French King and I had to sue for peace (an army of 25k will do that). At some point of me destroying his 60k troops (my generals had military ratings in the +16 and never stacked properly), hold his capital and his daughter, there should be a "negotiation" option. Though my main goal was to lower crown authority, I'd be happy to accept a couple of Counties, or maybe even a Duchy for peace. Instead, I had to take a 100 prestige point when I had to sue for peace (admittedly, my success of the battlefield earned me more than enough prestige points to make up for that 100).
P.S. Three of these points come from the same campaign (2, 4 and 7), but the rest I felt happen in general, especially the "death" one (point 3). Several wars, I've had the other king/sultan/etc... die and the War keeps going like normal. There should be some penalty for that, especially if he dies in battle.
1. Death or capture of a general should hit the morale and War score as well.
2. If you have a family member of the person you are fighting, it should also count in the War Score (had the daughter of the King I was fighting in my court, but didn't have any effect).
3. If the person you are fighting dies half way through the campaign, there should be a huge hit on the War Score as well, especially if the person taking over is bad militarily and not of same line (not brother, son, etc...)
4. When taking over provinces, capital should also be much more valuable (the War Score uptick is negligible)
5. When Sieging, it should give you the option of what dwelling to siege.
6. If one county has several dwellings, one should only "control" the province until you have more than half of them
7. Peace Processes. Instead of being absolute peace for your CB, there should be mid point once you're War Score is over a certain percentage, the peace offering is tempting to accept (give titles, money, hand in marriage of a son/daughter to stop the campaign)
Case in point: In a War to lower crown authority in Aragon, I pretty much won a dozen battles and controlled three provinces (including the capital at the time) but my War Score was still only about 50%. My +40k army had been diminished to about 15k, but had pretty much destroyed my King's army and was trying to up the War Score with sieges. Wasn't enough. He called in the French King and I had to sue for peace (an army of 25k will do that). At some point of me destroying his 60k troops (my generals had military ratings in the +16 and never stacked properly), hold his capital and his daughter, there should be a "negotiation" option. Though my main goal was to lower crown authority, I'd be happy to accept a couple of Counties, or maybe even a Duchy for peace. Instead, I had to take a 100 prestige point when I had to sue for peace (admittedly, my success of the battlefield earned me more than enough prestige points to make up for that 100).
P.S. Three of these points come from the same campaign (2, 4 and 7), but the rest I felt happen in general, especially the "death" one (point 3). Several wars, I've had the other king/sultan/etc... die and the War keeps going like normal. There should be some penalty for that, especially if he dies in battle.