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[en:Kings to the Seventh Generation]] |
2022年2月6日 (日) 14:27的版本
这是对于在CKIII困难级成就之一“七世列王”的全面指导。从表面上看,成就似乎相当简单:以 867 年的安茹伯爵厄德·卡佩(厄德·罗贝尔)开局,带领您的家族统治法兰西王国(具体来说是西法兰克王国)。 正常情况下,这个成就对于任何有经验的玩家来说都很简单,但也会有些复杂的情况。伯爵厄德在开局时间是一个父母双亡的 10 岁男孩,两位领主成为了您登上王位的最大障碍,而与您有杀父之仇的维京人就在您的卧榻之侧。这是个很可能默默无闻的小角色,若要缔造一番大业,您就必须积极进取。如果您打算在一生中达成此成就将使难度翻倍,而这就是这篇指导所要讲述的内容。
开始
再取消暂停之前,您需要处理几个问题:
年幼的厄德
年幼的厄德在他成长的中途时开始游戏,您需要控制他的教育重心。他在开局时会拥有特质#冷静特质与随机的童年特质与教育重心。我强烈建议刷出一个以管理为教育重心的开局,而第二个特质最好是固执或温和,以获得管理加成。如果特质是天主教美德之一也行,这能使其他人更待见您,并且您还能获得有用的虔诚。游玩前期您长时间会是只有三块领地的伯爵,更痛苦的是没有任何实地封臣。让管理能力变高以让自己能直辖4到5快领地来让您变成一股不容小觑的力量。
您要在没浪费太多时间前为自己选择一位好监护人,但如果没有任何好监护人(即管理能力高,没有可能污染你的负面特质)可供选择,请先等到有为止。
结盟
在正常游戏中,您大多数时间将扮演一名封臣。虽然您终将成为一名强大的封臣, 但早期您的军事力量属实堪忧。为了弥补这一点,把一些无用亲戚送去联姻来缔结盟约!让邻近王国的一些友好封臣站在您这边可以让战争更容易结束。只要确保避免与您最终要征服的任何人结盟——实际上,在法国北部没有与您友好的封臣——无论何时,都不要与您的领主结盟,你的目标是取代他,不是支持他!
The Council
Your starting council members will probably be pretty lousy, so replace them as quickly as possible. You probably won't have anyone suitable among your courtiers or guests, so it's time to start aggressively marrying people off to acquire fresh talent. You should have a few lady courtiers - make sure you've got the marriage type set to Matrilineal, then organize their marriage candidates by individual stats to hunt down the best talent in all the land. Do this for Marshal, Steward, and Chancellor if you have enough ladies on hand, or just Marshal and Steward if not.
Next, time to marry off some of your knights. Do the same thing to acquire an appropriate Spymaster and Court Physician (high Learning stat), the two jobs that Catholicism allows women to handle. Finally, check to see if an appropriate educator is available. Either male or female is fine for this role.
Arranged Marriage
While you can't get married until you're 16, you can betroth yourself to another ahead of time. The main advantage here is locking down a very promising candidate before anyone else can grab her. Ordering candidates by "Sum of All Skills" or "Rank" makes it easier to find suitable significant others. If the initial batch of candidates doesn't wow you, feel free to wait; new characters will appear out of the blue as the years go by. So long as you have a supportive wife by your side by the time you're a proper adult, you'll be fine.
The Teen Years
While you're stuck playing as a child, a lot of the standard gameplay options are just not going to be available to you. Personal and hostile schemes are not options, which means you should focus on two other tools in your toybox: secrets and war.
Secrets
Ascending to the throne before you die is an expensive venture, so you'll want as many sources of income as possible. For a Steward-focused character with the Golden Obligations perk, hooks (especially strong ones) are amazingly profitable. Every court will be fairly quiet at first, so leave your spymaster defending your court for the first couple years - your rival will occasionally try to murder you, so don't waste time sending her away from your own court when there's no value in it. Once you hit age 12 or so, the people of the world will have had time to start making poor life decisions and you can begin harvesting them up. Especially choice targets for blackmail include either of your lieges (renegotiating your own feudal contract is very profitable, plus it weakens your future enemies) or the Pope (an unlikely hit, but very useful for generating claims if you can accomplish it), but anyone with a holding can be shaken down for a quick 30-50 gold. If you have strong hooks, those payouts become regular occurrences every five years. The more secrets you can gather as a child, the bigger the payout on your 16th birthday.
Be aware that characters with the "Honest" or "Just" traits generate stress by doing this. Do it anyway. The stress hits are small enough that you should be able to handle it through hunting and feasting so long as you space things out. Under no circumstances should you stress yourself past 40 through blackmail, as you have plenty of family members who will die over the next few decades. No sense giving yourself a mental break just to make a little gold.
War
If you're accustomed to playing as a giant empire, smashing your opponents under massive hordes, you might be heading for a bad time here. Your targets early on are limited to enemies of the faith and counties you have claims on. While it's possible to call all your allies to come to your assistance, the Prestige cost for doing so means you should do so sparingly. Fortunately, Eudes begins with a pair of choice targets right off the bat. Just north of your capitol lies the county of Vendome, held by a count with no other territory. Devour his territory immediately, restoring Control afterwards if needed. Every county under your control is another source of tax income and levies to scare off attackers with, and the sooner you reach maximum size, the better. Your fellow vassals are unlikely to attack you for your territory, but the weaker and less popular you are, the more likely this is to happen.
Most of the other lands you have claims on are controlled by much scarier opponents, but your next target isn't any of them at all. Instead, turn your eyes toward Montaigu, the single county to your west that is held by your rival, Haesteinn. He has a massive army made up of special troops, making him undefeatable in a fair fight and a constant raid threat. Taking his land for your own as soon as possible gets rid of one of the major irritants of this challenge, and thankfully he provides an opportunity to do just that early on.
Soon after the game begins, you'll notice his troops travelling away from his territory. Check his character screen to confirm that he's on an adventuring war against one of the nearby kingdoms. If he manages to win this war, your rival goes from being a dangerous count to a terrifying king, but you can stop this. Watch his war's victory percentage. Once it starts to climb above 0%, he will be fully invested in the war abroad. Take this opportunity to declare a Holy War for his county, then rush in, conquering the place unopposed. With any luck, you'll add his land to yours long before he wins his war and ascends to kinghood. That's your future job, not his.
Once you've grabbed two additional counties, you may be at your managerial capacity. If you can fit a fifth, look around at other counties you have claims on; you should be able to find several that can be taken, although you might need to call for help from allies and attack together. Either way, once you've gotten all the land you can comfortably hold as a count, let your levies recover to full, make sure your Marshal is increasing your max levy size, and then get ready to become a Duke.
Life as a Duke
Miniboss: Duke Hugo
You can't progress beyond this point very far without grabbing your half-brother Hugo's duchy title away from him; it's the only title of that rank you already have a claim on, and besides, Hugo is not a very intimidating opponent - unless the RNG has behaved very oddly, he shouldn't have anywhere near as many allies as you do. Ideally you should be able to take him out before reaching adulthood through use of your own allies and men-at-arms (bowmen are an excellent and affordable option early on, and even a single force of onagers makes sieges go faster), but feel free to save up funds for more men-at-arms or even some mercenaries if you need to. The gold is better spent upgrading your holdings, but failing a war against your liege is not ideal. As soon as he's defeated, the two of you switch places and he becomes your own (very unhappy) first vassal.
Serious Growth
Once you've become a duke, the cap on your controlled territories is removed and you can start collecting vassals! This is going to be your primary goal for the next twenty years or so, particularly in areas that allow you to create new duchy titles. Along with granting you a pile of prestige and improved tax and levy output, holding a duchy will make your new liege (the king) hand over his own vassals in that region for you to manage! Any territory that you don't need to fight for is a good thing.
Prestige may be a limiting factor in how quickly you can spread. Waging war on your own claim is much cheaper than doing so on behalf of a vassal, and holy wars are actually quite difficult when your opponent is actually there and willing to fight you. Besides, you should focus on territory within West Francia; the more of the place you control when the final battle starts, the easier it'll be. Having a competent chancellor will provide you with a steady stream of prestige, but you'll definitely need more than that.
Be sure to spend cash on extracurricular activities. Hosting Feasts and Hunts will help you manage stress, gain useful traits, and generate big chunks of Prestige. Going on Pilgrimages generates Piety and makes you more popular with fellow Catholics, but more importantly, allows you to ask the Pope for funding. Don't be afraid of the small popularity hit that comes with begging for cash from the Vatican; that will fade and the gold will be very useful.
Also, feel free to be a good little vassal and join your liege's wars! Yes, he will eventually be your opponent, but for now you should help him keep vikings out. Better still are wars against Italy, as Italy will invariably call its allies to assist it, providing you with a massive neighboring country with a busy military to loot, chock full of sites to siege and nobles to kidnap and ransom. You can acquire far more wealth looting and ransoming than you lose paying for your soldiers. In any case, joining these wars will sometimes make your liege become your Friend, which is not a bad thing. Friends are a lot slower to anger when you generate claims on their kingdoms, after all.
As all this is happening, you'll be gaining Stewardship perks. Take everything in the Avaricious tree, as well as Tax Man, Cutting Cornerstones, and Professional Workforce from Architect; you'll want to build up your controlled territories with as many gold- and levy-producing buildings as possible. By the time you've completed the tree, your liege will likely have died and been replaced by his less competent, less popular son. If West Francia still contains multiple kingdoms, the succession will split them up, greatly reducing your new liege's power. Your next perk should go into the Meritocracy perk of the Administrator branch, because it's time to take the throne.
Final Boss: The King of France
Unlike Duke Hugo, who you go up against in the end is determined by the RNG, but that hardly matters; the easiest way to take the throne involves very little direct conflict. First, save up some funds for mercenaries. Being able to summon a few thousand troops at a moment's notice is very powerful, making any fighting that does happen much less concerning. Next, use the Claim Throne decision against your liege. It'll take a while to finish, though setting your Spymaster to assist your schemes will speed things up significantly. You will want to do this fast to minimize the chance of your liege noticing your actions and deciding to act against you. For extra insurance, first get a hook against your liege, then renegotiate your contract to protect your titles, but ideally this won't be necessary.
Once you have a claim, be patient. War will break out, either on the border of Spain or the northern coast of France. In either case, your liege will commit his troops to deal with the mess, which will be your time to strike. Declare war against the liege for your claim on the kingdom of West Francia. If all goes well, your liege's troops will be so tied up dealing with the first issue that you'll be able to take several holdings before the first battle, and all your allies will have arrived and joined the party. Grabbing the enemy capitol can result in critical prisoners being taken, which may end the war early. If not, your liege's beleaguered armies will eventually march out to face you, reduced by their first war and already well behind in war score. Between your armies, your allies, and your mercenaries, your reduced opponent should be no match for you.
Win the war, declare yourself king, and pat yourself on the back for achieving Kings to the Seventh Generation in just one.
What Now?
Oftentimes, after snagging an achievement, a run kind of loses direction. One particularly nasty goal you can pursue from here is the Frankokratia achievement: as a French Catholic (hey that's you), hold the Kingdom of Thessalonika without being a vassal of the Byzantine Empire. There are fastier and cheatier ways to accomplish this, but if you want to push your plucky little Robertine cadet branch to the limits, start conquering eastward! It's a long march and there's a lot of territory to snag along the way, but holding the heart of Byzantium for your own is a solid cap on your story. Just remember that "Invite Claimants" and the Learning branch ability "Sanctioned Loopholes" are very powerful when you need a proper casus belli, and consider grabbing any regional techs along the way that improve vassal mood. By the time you're done, you'll need every advantage you can get to keep your empire from being in constant rebellion under its own weight.
[en:Kings to the Seventh Generation]]