[X[ Abdication means that the person will be legally considered dead for the purpose of inheritance of the title in question. What that means has to be determined by the title holder when setting succession law.

Hmm... By most Westerosi custom that might actually allow any future children to inherit since if a title holder should leave a woman pregnant and then die before the birth the child would be in the line of succession. Of course that does not include the matter of children conceived by a dead man.
 
Hmm... By most Westerosi custom that might actually allow any future children to inherit since if a title holder should leave a woman pregnant and then die before the birth the child would be in the line of succession. Of course that does not include the matter of children conceived by a dead man.
That's why I'm telling them to sort this out themselves if they don't want us to name whoever we feel like the heir.
 
@DragonParadox, I just noticed a small error. Randyll Tarly was not slated to become a duke. Depending on where exactly Horn Hill would have been placed on the map, he would have still been sworn to Highgarden and Duke Mace Tyrell of the Mandervale, or the Duke Baelon Hightower of Oldtown. We never formally sorted his rank out, but he would likely only have been a Baron. At most, he would have been Count of Westmarch.
 
Last edited:
[X[ Abdication means that the person will be legally considered dead for the purpose of inheritance of the title in question. What that means has to be determined by the title holder when setting succession law.
The tally isn't gonna count your vote unless you swap that bracket around.

[X] Abdication means that the person will be legally considered dead for the purpose of inheritance of the title in question. What that means has to be determined by the title holder when setting succession law.
 
Last edited:
@DragonParadox, I just noticed a small error. Randyll Tarly was not slated to become a duke. Depending on where exactly Horn Hill would have been placed on the map, he would have still been sworn to Highgarden and Duke Mace Tyrell of the Mandervale, or the Duke Baelon Hightower of Oldtown. We never formally sorted his rank out, but he would likely only have been a Baron. At most, he would have been Count of Westmarch.

Fixed, thanks. From what I recall of canon I think Count works best, Randyl seemed to rule over rather wide lands and he was well respected for that as much as his military skills.
 
[X]Abdication means that the person will be legally considered dead for the purpose of inheritance of the title in question. What that means has to be determined by the title holder when setting succession law.
 
Last edited:
[X] Allow titles to be transferred to the children of ineligible dynasty members (ex: any future children Randyll Tarly may have)
 
The tally isn't gonna count your vote unless you swap that bracket around.

[X] Abdication means that the person will be legally considered dead for the purpose of inheritance of the title in question. What that means has to be determined by the title holder when setting succession law.
Oops. Fixed.
 
Vote closed. Also is it just me or did the like/reaction proportions change. I can't say I dislike it but it does look odd.
Adhoc vote count started by DragonParadox on Apr 11, 2021 at 1:07 PM, finished with 27 posts and 20 votes.
 
Vote closed. Also is it just me or did the like/reaction proportions change. I can't say I dislike it but it does look odd.
Adhoc vote count started by DragonParadox on Apr 11, 2021 at 1:07 PM, finished with 27 posts and 20 votes.
Yeah, changed for me, too. Now the Funny rating is kinda scary.
 
[X] Azel

Ops, votes closed. Anyway, just giving out my late support.

Also the icons became annoyingly huge, but I can understand why you want to change their sizes since it's hard to press them in the phone.
 
Last edited:
By the way, the idea of dead men having children is not some legal fiction or comical D&D issue. I think it was the kingdom of France who once had to wait on the wife of the dead king to give birth to figure out if the child was male and thus the new king of France or if the cousin would inherit.
 
Last edited:
By the way, the idea of dead men having children is not some legal fiction or comical D&D issue. I think it was the kingdom of France who once had to wait on the wife of the dead king to give birth to figure out if the child was male and thus the new king of France or if the cousin would inherit.

I think it's happened a bunch. Or maybe I'm thinking of that one ASOIAF fic where the Tyrells decide to get Margery knocked up by a suitably blackhaired person right after Renlys death to try and worm their way into a victorious Stannis' court as "family"
 
Tyrells probably plotting something right now to gain influence. Them being disliked in court, Doran loving pointing it out to everyone that will listen and now adding Tarly getting a high official position. Tyrells got to be desperate so probably involves Marg right?
 
Honestly, I dislike the new reactions. They're too big and attention-grabbing, and they increase the amount of screen space devoted to junk and not to actual post content.
My condolences to everyone who posted here about the nightmares the horror funny rating will cause.
 
Back
Top