High Partition functionally works like Partition with more generous demands for each heir, even though its coded to be different. As a Kingdom your primary heir will keep your "primary" Duchy (the one that has your capital usually) and all the counties inside that Duchy, and will try to give each of your other heirs Duchies with all their de jure Counties. So with 3 heirs and 2 Duchies and only counties inside those 2 Duchies it will leave the 3rd heir with no inheritance, and give your second Duchy and all its de jure Counties to your second heir. If you get more Kingdom tier titles it will split them amongst the heirs because it partitions them like the Duchies. Basically the law wants to give 1 of each tier of title (1 Empire, 1 Kingdom, 1 Duchy and the de jure counties to that Duchy) to each heir. Personally I use it because if you only hold 1 Duchy it works like Primogeniture.
Hey, thanks for the video. I consider myself a decent ck3 player and I sometimes got messed up by patrician and didn't know why. The big thing that helped was your explanation of giving your son a kingdom but he still wants land, I never understood why that happend. Anyway great video!
Tbh pretty low effort content imo + really not needed one aswell, since this got covered by a ton of people already (some not so well tho). Also this isnt your style, you are more fitting for storytelling or discussion based videos or speedruns You get bonus points for showing so much skin in the vid
Always love your videos. Counties are split based on how they’re listed in your titles. On character page after kingdoms and duchies, whatever order the counties are listed, they’ll just alternate down your line of succession.
Didnt think throwing titles at kids would work... Interesting. I kinda got the "higher tier > any amount of lower tier" rule as a "higher tier goes out first" and i did get the dejure part all before this video. So i'll think that was pretty good.
High Partition functionally works like Partition with more generous demands for each heir, even though its coded to be different. As a Kingdom your primary heir will keep your "primary" Duchy (the one that has your capital usually) and all the counties inside that Duchy, and will try to give each of your other heirs Duchies with all their de jure Counties.
So with 3 heirs and 2 Duchies and only counties inside those 2 Duchies it will leave the 3rd heir with no inheritance, and give your second Duchy and all its de jure Counties to your second heir. If you get more Kingdom tier titles it will split them amongst the heirs because it partitions them like the Duchies. Basically the law wants to give 1 of each tier of title (1 Empire, 1 Kingdom, 1 Duchy and the de jure counties to that Duchy) to each heir.
Personally I use it because if you only hold 1 Duchy it works like Primogeniture.
That duchy strat is really cool, never thought of that before...
Love the song at the end. I play it while I play ck
I love that this is quick
Hey, thanks for the video. I consider myself a decent ck3 player and I sometimes got messed up by patrician and didn't know why. The big thing that helped was your explanation of giving your son a kingdom but he still wants land, I never understood why that happend. Anyway great video!
Very interesting, thank you
Oooo love this
We’re supposed to enjoy and embrace partitions 😅
I like how you can just ignore all these inheritance mechanics by using Elective law that is available without innovation or culture
I am the laziest here, there is a mod that just give you all partitions at game start
I think this is the wrong game to use a camera, especially for a guide like this
😳 rude
Tbh pretty low effort content imo + really not needed one aswell, since this got covered by a ton of people already (some not so well tho). Also this isnt your style, you are more fitting for storytelling or discussion based videos or speedruns
You get bonus points for showing so much skin in the vid
That's so great of you to say, but like, who asked?
Was gonna say "What a stupid comment". Then I saw who wrote it and realized it's just banter 😆
Was very informative to me!
Always love your videos. Counties are split based on how they’re listed in your titles. On character page after kingdoms and duchies, whatever order the counties are listed, they’ll just alternate down your line of succession.
Thanks man! This guide will be very usefull
Didnt think throwing titles at kids would work... Interesting. I kinda got the "higher tier > any amount of lower tier" rule as a "higher tier goes out first" and i did get the dejure part all before this video. So i'll think that was pretty good.
Very helpful!
Thanks once more for your deep dives into the „hidden“ mechanics in CK3. Very helpful.
This was interesting, thank you.