• We have updated our Community Code of Conduct. Please read through the new rules for the forum that are an integral part of Paradox Interactive’s User Agreement.

CK2 Dev Diary #102 - About that one dead religion...


Greetings.

Well, then... Holy Fury will make Hellenism playable.

20180730093248_1.jpg


Now, now, let us be clear: there are not going to be any significant changes in the game’s history. Holy Fury will simply offer a couple of ways for a ruler to revive the religion when meeting some strict requirements.
This is no easy choice to make, of course, as doing so will likely make your character reviled by both vassals and neighbors alike and cause your realm to fall into a crippling civil war, but then again, if the cause is just...

20180730093553_1.jpg


The first opportunity to restore Hellenism will come immediately after restoring the Roman Empire as a Greek or Italian ruler. Your character will receive an event shortly after becoming Emperor where he ponders about reintroducing the old state religion.
20180730093708_1.jpg


Naturally, if you decide to do so, your Abrahamic vassals will assume that you have gone insane (which, I suppose, may very well be the case...) and likely band together in a large revolt to depose you. Be aware that defeat during this civil war could easily result in a game over: if your heir is also a pagan like you, the leader of the rebellious vassals will take over the entire Empire for himself and away from your heathen dynasty.
On the other hand, if you are successful, you will be able to remain in power and some of your less reluctant vassals might decide that embracing Hellenism is not such a ludicrous proposition after all.

20180730094033_1.jpg


While not entirely connected to the Hellenic Restoration, I would also like to talk about a few other additions that have been slipped in the old Roman Empire revival event chain.
First of all, remember how the silly Pope tends to fill Rome with Church holdings, making the city not exactly palatable as a feudal capital? Well, worry no more! For now, after restoring the Empire (and provided that Rome has two or more temple holdings), your ruler will be given the chance to emulate Nero and clean up the place a bit. It might seriously hurt Catholic Moral Authority and the local peasants might get really upset about it, but, at the end of the day, aren’t those empty slots worth it?

20180730094125_1.jpg


A second new little feature you might enjoy is the Roman Renaissance decision, which will become available after ruling the restored Empire for a few years, provided that you have moved the capital to Rome, belong to either Greek or Italian culture and are either Christian or Hellenic. This decision will allow your ruler to reintroduce Roman culture to the Empire. On a practical level, this will allow your realm to become more homogenous, as provinces and rulers belonging to any Latin culture will be very susceptible to switch to the new one and, if you are Hellenic, they will also have a chance to switch both culturally and religiously when embracing the new renaissance. On a roleplaying level, your characters will get swanky new togas to dress in.

Hellenics5.jpg


Now, let us go back to Hellenism proper. As I was saying before, there is a second way for a ruler to restore the dead religion, if conquering all of western Europe is too much of a hassle for you.
If you are a Christian, of either Greek or Italian culture, your capital is located in Southern Europe, you completely control one of the Hellenic Holy Sites (Thessalonika, Athens, Rome, Alexandria or Abydos), and you are interested in scholarly matters, or are insane, you will have access to a new decision: Delve into Classics.
If taken, this decision will allow a character to go through a short event chain during which you might become enamored enough with Hellenic mythology to decide to secretly convert to it and start your own Society of Hellenes. Whatever you wish to do after that in order to spread the religion will be up to you.

This is it for what concerns the means to resurrect Hellenism, but what about the religion itself?
You will be pleased to know that it is no longer an empty husk and has now actual flavor and mechanics to it.

20180730094306_1.jpg


First of all, the religion is no longer pre-reformed: it can make use of the new Pagan Reformation feature just like any other form of paganism (and, as a small aside, you might be happy to know that reforming it as a Greek character will give all the gods their Greek names).
As for how the religion starts, Hellenism is now strictly monogamous (no concubinage), and does not have access to Pagan Subjugation. On the other hand, all Roman and Byzantine events previously restricted to Christians are now also available to Hellenic rulers (chariot races, Imperial Reconquests, etc.). Additionally, Hellenism starts having by default the effects of the Haruspicy and Astrology Doctrines, as well as having access to a new unique mechanic: temple dedication.

As a Hellenic ruler, you will be able to dedicate any temple holding within your realm to one of the twelve main deities of your pantheon. Doing so will give your ruler a temporary boost as well as activate a special building granting a permanent bonus to the holding’s province. These dedicated shrines are permanent, merely becoming inactive when under a ruler of a different religion. The kind of boost that they grant is naturally tied to the god they are being dedicated to.

20180730094406_1.jpg


Finally, Hellenism has been given access to a few societies, though most of them, like the religion, will need to be recreated by a powerful ruler before becoming active.
Aside from having immediate access to Hermetics, Hellenics can now form the Stoics (a Monastic Order), the Bacchants (a Satanist society), and the Olympian Champions (a Warrior Lodge). Aside from their outlook, the Stoics and Bacchants work exactly as their Christian counterparts, with the one exception being that the Rank 4 County Conversion power of the Stoics will convert a province culturally rather than religiously.

Well then, this should cover most of it.


Note: As we are aware that the inclusion of the Hellenic religion might break immersion for some of our players, we have included a Game Rule to go with it. If the rule is turned off, it will disable the Delve into Classics decision and the Hellenic Revival event chain following the Roman Empire’s restoration, removing any chance of the religion reappearing in a regular game (though note that the religion might still spawn in Random World, depending on what settings you use when generating its history).
 
What exactly does
ggwgeVC.png

mean?
Do all holy sites become directly owned by the Emperor, or do all temple owners become direct vassals?
Temple baronies corrisponding to the Hellenic Holy Sites within your Empire are seized from non-hellenic priests and given to new hellenic priests.
 
If you are picking Doctrines that enforce a specific kind of succession, the succession law will be applied the moment you convert. If you are picking Doctrines that only enable a specific kind of succession, you will have to change the law manually as usual (the new law will just become available). This is of course valid for any Pagan Reformation.

So you'll have to trade in your improved succession law for an unreformed religion you basically can reform right away (assuming you've got 50 % MA and 750 piety) in a fashion enabling your old law, meaning you'll have to go e.g. Orthodox Primogeniture -> Hellenic Gavelkind -> Reformed Hellenic Gavelkind (assuming there's no "Force Primogeniture" feature) instead of having a character flag (or whatever, but a character flag seems like a decent option) that allows e.g. Orthodox Primogeniture -> Hellenic Primogeniture -> Reformed Hellenic Primogeniture?

I guess that is going on the "Stuff to fix" list for my personal mod, then...
 
The Roman Renaissance decision should appear regardless, though, given all the map and code changes coming with HF, I'm not sure if there wouldn't be other strange things happening on the map.

Woohoo!

I'll take the risk - after all, it's managed to pull through this far (beyond wjhat I expected!) and it might give me something to do in the last centruy or so...!

(I always DO make and label a post-patch save anyway, and it's not like i play Ironman.)
 
well its not totally ahistorical. Gemistus Pletho was a really high ranked important advisor of the byzantine emperor and he was for the restoration of the old religion. he even said that the empire fell because of christianity.
 
If there was any time for a crusade, this is one. Christ's light shall not flicker!

(Sweet Dev Diary)
 
I'm not really sure about this. I mean it's great that you add flavour to the meme religion of CK2, but that took work that could have gone into making Orthodoxy more flavourful. It's kinda barren like the old Hellenism.
 
Thank you Paradox Devs! This is a feature I have wished for, for a loooong time. I also love the Gods will get their Greek names if a Greek character reforms the faith and most of all, Hestia gets some time in the spotlight. Yaaaay!

On an unrelated note, I hope Sunset Invasion gets some features added to it in a later patch. The Aztec religion will really start to feel out of place considering as far as I am aware it does not get any societies, whether they be Monastic, Warrior or the Devil Cult. Although.... I suppose you could argue the main Aztec Religion is almost a devil cult. Nevertheless, Sunset Invasion is my of my favorite DLCs due to how its shakes up Western Europe so I hope it gets some societies and perhaps even the off-map empire treatment China has in a future update.
 
Wrong you can turn it off, learn to bloody read.

Also it's no more ridiculous then many of the other things already in the game, some of them from launch back in 2012.

It didn't really die with Julian the Philosopher either, while none of the others had much success there were several attempt by Senators in the Western Empire to undo Theodosius intolerance and if not defeat Christianity at least make it forced to tolerate the Pagans. The Eastern Empire also had the Platonic Academy in Athens open well into the reign of Justinian not to mention there were a couple of would be Emperor candidates who attempted to revolt and failed in the 400's that were Pagan eg during the reign of Zeno.

Ok, i'll give you that (there are already fantasy elements in ck2, it's True ans also das.).
But none of the above mentioned was realistic either. And remember, were the ck2 timeline starts (plus watch your language please).
 
Oh, please, first, it is just a game and this is fun (beside, more ridiculos thngs happened in the original timeline. :D ), second it is all optional, if you don't like it, just set the rule and ignore it. No need to be a spoilsport.

(Also, I would not mind a fantasy DLC, with magic systems, different races and things like that, If Total War can do it, why not CK2 :)).

It would not be weirder that Sunset Invasion. :p

You're right.
 
will Sol Invictus be add with the Roman culture? If added, would it be as a Roman cult or a heresies because I'd like to be the official sun god of the Roman Empire.

Also maybe adding Mithraism
Since the gods' names change depending on whether you have Greek or Italian/Roman culture for Hellenic, presumably becoming Zunist with Roman culture will make that the cult of Sol.
 
With the Greek reform changing names of the gods to their Greek part will we see something similar for the other pagan religions like Anglo-Saxon/Saxon/Germans reforming Germanic changing Odin to Wotan etc?