Just hand over a highly trained governor for literally zero benefit?
Absolutely not. Due to current game mechanics, all women born in my family are destined to be spinsters with hella administrative skills.
Just due to this game mechanic I do things the opposite way. My sons are basically fuck-governors. I find them a wife, and then they sit in a settlement together for a few years until the babies stop coming, then they get split up so the wife can be a governor too.
Meanwhile my daughters are out becoming peerless warriors. Leading my parties around, pillaging, defending against incursions. That sort of thing.
Solid strat!
Admittedly, I rarely make it past my initial offspring achieving adulthood. I tend to lose interest in the mid/late game as it's just trying to beat down the raiding parties of long-gone kingdoms and rotating truces between the 5 remaining (generally fighting 4 at a time) kingdoms.
Stewardship first and foremost, trade next. After that it's useful to have siege, medicine and tactics. That way if/when the settlement comes under siege, they can hold out long enough for your relief force to show up.
Last time I did that I fought my daughter like 15 times in battle before they finally came to my side. Had to let her go every time. Was how we got better relations with the family. I guess eventually it works but
I did my first playthrough last week and married my little sister off to some Southern Empire cuck before realising i could no longer use her or retrieve her ever again :(
She was gonna inherit everything.
Just hand over a highly trained governor for literally zero benefit? Absolutely not. Due to current game mechanics, all women born in my family are destined to be spinsters with hella administrative skills.
Just due to this game mechanic I do things the opposite way. My sons are basically fuck-governors. I find them a wife, and then they sit in a settlement together for a few years until the babies stop coming, then they get split up so the wife can be a governor too. Meanwhile my daughters are out becoming peerless warriors. Leading my parties around, pillaging, defending against incursions. That sort of thing.
Solid strat! Admittedly, I rarely make it past my initial offspring achieving adulthood. I tend to lose interest in the mid/late game as it's just trying to beat down the raiding parties of long-gone kingdoms and rotating truces between the 5 remaining (generally fighting 4 at a time) kingdoms.
How do you level them for this? What skills do you focus
Stewardship first and foremost, trade next. After that it's useful to have siege, medicine and tactics. That way if/when the settlement comes under siege, they can hold out long enough for your relief force to show up.
Is there any purpose to marrying off female characters?
In-game lore portends that it brings your clan closer to the other one, but I have yet to see that happen to any practical effect.
So... no
As far as I know? No.
Last time I did that I fought my daughter like 15 times in battle before they finally came to my side. Had to let her go every time. Was how we got better relations with the family. I guess eventually it works but
I kill any man who tries to marry her, i will only wed her to the man who kills me because i know he can protect her
{marriageCheck(isDead); {If isDead; {} else; {print"You are not worthy"}; } }
ah yes, poogramming
I did my first playthrough last week and married my little sister off to some Southern Empire cuck before realising i could no longer use her or retrieve her ever again :( She was gonna inherit everything.
Oof - I get it.
Give away one of my governors? No I don't think I will
![gif](giphy|tnYri4n2Frnig)
I sell off my daughter's to clans within my kingdom, never outside, so they can build their clan and not die off through battle and old age.
![gif](giphy|fjxe5pkbfK9ubSbirM)
Damn straight...
Lol me too
I married her off to a Battanian noble like a week before I betrayed them. Ended up getting captured by my own sister, lmao.
Bruh 🤣
![gif](giphy|yQhjRMKEwObss)
![gif](giphy|zWQD0nPsDYxwSr50iF)
So sending my best blacksmith to a poor family from a different kingdom? And basically get no benefit? NO.