I wouldn't like to copy the thread but please see the link:
http://forum.paradoxplaza.com/forum...geniture-not-working-as-intended-(Wrong-heir)
In short: the game seems to apply proximity of blood in primogeniture, missing the principle of representation. Grandchildren don't fill in for dead sons. There is some room for debate in the case of the dead first son's only daughter vs the living second son in agnatic-cognatic but I believe the preference of senior lines of descent should be absolute here, i.e. even in agnatic-cognatic the grand-daughter should win in this case because her father, while not a ruler himself, basically eliminated his junior brothers from succession. You could argue that her uncle was still a suitable male heir, though. What I would like is clarification, to be honest. I can easily accept that in CK2 the second son wins against the dead first son's only daughter under agnatic-cognatic primogeniture if this is confirmed to be WAD. But I'd like to know that it is indeed WAD and not e.g. a missing script for the principle of representation. People have reported grandsons getting skipped and it has actually happened to me once but after reloading the game from a save the heir was different (properly the grandson). You could make proximity of blood a separate optional law perhaps? Even brothers of monarchs sometimes preceded their sons but that was generally an ad-hoc form of dynastically closed election, not an organised form of primogeniture.
http://forum.paradoxplaza.com/forum...geniture-not-working-as-intended-(Wrong-heir)
In short: the game seems to apply proximity of blood in primogeniture, missing the principle of representation. Grandchildren don't fill in for dead sons. There is some room for debate in the case of the dead first son's only daughter vs the living second son in agnatic-cognatic but I believe the preference of senior lines of descent should be absolute here, i.e. even in agnatic-cognatic the grand-daughter should win in this case because her father, while not a ruler himself, basically eliminated his junior brothers from succession. You could argue that her uncle was still a suitable male heir, though. What I would like is clarification, to be honest. I can easily accept that in CK2 the second son wins against the dead first son's only daughter under agnatic-cognatic primogeniture if this is confirmed to be WAD. But I'd like to know that it is indeed WAD and not e.g. a missing script for the principle of representation. People have reported grandsons getting skipped and it has actually happened to me once but after reloading the game from a save the heir was different (properly the grandson). You could make proximity of blood a separate optional law perhaps? Even brothers of monarchs sometimes preceded their sons but that was generally an ad-hoc form of dynastically closed election, not an organised form of primogeniture.
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