

If you have many children eligible for succession, you may see your realm fracture when your current ruler dies. It also presents you with some interesting problems.

It features a lot of options for you to roleplay as the various members of the dynasty that you play as. While CK3 is a strategy game, it has a heavy focus on characters. However, there is a $5/month subscription that gives access to all DLC if you are interested in trying it out. I have some 1300 hours in EU4, and so far 50 hours in CK3 (and 250 in CK2).ĬK3 is easier to get into, but I find it doesn't necessarily translate very well to other strategy games because you are playing a succession of characters, as opposed to a single nation-state.ĮU4 is much more of a "finished" product, but the flip side to that is the fact that it takes DLC to really make it feel polished.
