I've just been looking at the Alternate Reformation events for the first time, and overall they look good, especially the early ones. But one thing I don't think is a good idea is using Protestant religion to represent the Pope, even if it is Martin Luther. For one thing, they're not really breaking away from the Church; the old Catholic hierarchy is still more or less intact, national rulers haven't seized church assets, they have no affinity for the radical Reformed churches and so on, and as such, the reformed Catholic countries should still be getting basically Catholic religion bonuses. Secondly, if the reformists win, that means almost the whole of Europe goes along with them, along with their colonies. Do we need to subject them all to conversion events, leading to broken alliances and relations everywhere, and mess around to ensure the new religion 'sticks' for AI countries? (I saw a failure of this for Eire - they backed the 'Protestant' Pope, then flipped back to Traditionalist Catholic a few years later simply because they had too many TC colonies.) Finally, it's good to have that Protestant tag available for genuine Protestants - they'll be fewer of them, but they'll still exist.
What I suggest is the following:
During initial period of turmoil, everyone is Catholic. Loyalties to one side or another wouldn't be set in stone at this point, especially as one side tends to largely win over the other, and the business of converting provinces back and forth is not a good model. Dissent can be represented by bad relations and RR.
If the conservatives win, that's obviously the end of the alternative Reformation, and we get a conventional one instead, with Protestant churches popping up in a lot of former reformist areas.
If the reformists win, they get to say what Catholicism means. It's the die-hard conservatives who will be seen by history as the schismatics and heretics. But as for the conservatives who become permanently estranged from the main Catholic church, they're likely to form their own churches, but with strong hierarchies, colourful ritual and a lot of practices based on tradition. (In a way, this has happened in real life - consider Traditionalist Catholics like Mel Gibson.) In other words, they'll be rather like the Orthodox church, or rather the collection of autonomous conservative churches we represent as Orthodox. As such, I suggest we use that tag.
What I suggest is the following:
During initial period of turmoil, everyone is Catholic. Loyalties to one side or another wouldn't be set in stone at this point, especially as one side tends to largely win over the other, and the business of converting provinces back and forth is not a good model. Dissent can be represented by bad relations and RR.
If the conservatives win, that's obviously the end of the alternative Reformation, and we get a conventional one instead, with Protestant churches popping up in a lot of former reformist areas.
If the reformists win, they get to say what Catholicism means. It's the die-hard conservatives who will be seen by history as the schismatics and heretics. But as for the conservatives who become permanently estranged from the main Catholic church, they're likely to form their own churches, but with strong hierarchies, colourful ritual and a lot of practices based on tradition. (In a way, this has happened in real life - consider Traditionalist Catholics like Mel Gibson.) In other words, they'll be rather like the Orthodox church, or rather the collection of autonomous conservative churches we represent as Orthodox. As such, I suggest we use that tag.