Vassals are the most simply type of subject and easiest to form. Generally the order of most rebellious to least rebellious is: Vassal > March > Colonial Nation > Personal Union although the latter three are relatively close and can interchange in certain situations. All types of subjects use Liberty Desire which you will generally endevour to keep below 50% as past 50% the AI will stop paying any taxes generally not help in wars, and becomes able to ally with other powers to try and declare independance. Vassals Marches Personal Unions and Colonial Nations. There are 4 main types of subjects in EU4. ![]() Since a lot of people IMO heavily underutilise subject nations, particularly in Single-Player.įor the purposes of screenshots I'm just using console commands and tagging between nations in 1444. However i don't know if this is like that in the MEIOU mod too.So with with changes from states to Governing Capacity in 1.30 I thought it a good idea to talk about subjects and write a little guide about them. ![]() At tech lvl 22 you also get an imperialism CB against everyone. The most used ones are the exploration Idea CB against nations in the new world, the expansion Idea CB against asian nations and the religious Idea CB against nations of another religion. But this doesn't seem to be the case in this mod.ģ) There are several ways to get CB. In the vanilla game you have to wait 10years after vassalization and have an opinion of 190 and positive diplomatic reputation. It seems to be a special system of MEIOU. Dunno how it is in MEIOU, but in the vanilla game you either have to occupy all allies in the war to get 100% or wait 5years with the war leader completly occupied.Ģ) The Granada vassal message doesn't exist in the vanilla game, so better ask the MEIOU team here. In your first screen you only have 18%warscore. The MEIOU mod changes many things in the vanilla game, so better mention that next time or directly ask at the MEIOU mod section :)ġ) You can only press the full annexation button when you have 100% Warscore (and the province cost are less than 100% ofc). Anything higher will require you to eat it piece by piece. ![]() You can only annex or vassalize if that number is 100% or below (well slightly above 100% if you got a claim on a province and declares for it iirc). If you hover your mouse over that icon, it'll pop up and show "total cost of the nations provinces". You can select a province of your enemy (ie Aragon) and you'll see some crossed swords and a %. If you started at the earliest starting date, Granada is not your vassal, their provinces are just your cores and you can declare war for them as soon as your truce ends (or by breaking truce though it will cripple your nation). After that you'll use diplomatic power at a rate of your overall diplomatic reputation+1 (and +1 for each of the following: Same culture group, same religion, which for Granada wont play a role) It has always been 10 years, 50 years is only for PUs what starting date did you chose ? =)Īnnexation of a vassal requires you to have kept them vassal for 10 years, be at peace and have your vassal have 190+ opinion of you. You wouldent want to to take a whole large country in one go anyway as you will become rife with rebels :) ![]() Originally posted by Toast of Doom:To annex a vassal, they must have been your vassal for at least 50 years (it might be 10 now in recent DLCs) and they need to have an opinion of you of +200 :)Īs for annexing larger countries like Aragon, yes you need to break them piece by piece, especialy wealthier nations.
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