Difference between revisions of "Dual Monarch"

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The way this system works is that if '''Province A''' and '''Province B''' are meant to be sharing votes with '''Province A''' being the main monarch, then each province would vote for the other, and '''Province A''' would ensure that he gathers enough votes on himself to be the monarch. When '''Province B''' requires monarchy however, he will switch his vote from '''Province A''' to himself and thus gain the monarchy.
 
The way this system works is that if '''Province A''' and '''Province B''' are meant to be sharing votes with '''Province A''' being the main monarch, then each province would vote for the other, and '''Province A''' would ensure that he gathers enough votes on himself to be the monarch. When '''Province B''' requires monarchy however, he will switch his vote from '''Province A''' to himself and thus gain the monarchy.
  
However, this may lead to the kingdom page showing 2 monarches present in the kingdom until '''Province A''' is [[Province update|updated]].
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However, this may lead to the kingdom page showing 2 monarches present in the kingdom until '''Province A''' is updated.
  
 
[[Category:Mini Guides]]
 
[[Category:Mini Guides]]

Revision as of 21:19, 28 May 2017

This is part of the Utopia WIKI Player written guides.

THIS PAGE is a guide aimed to cover Dual Monarch. It comprises of tips and tricks written by other players, for regular utopians. Please be civil in your discussions if you disagree with a point made on the page.


Dual monarchy is a system employed by some kingdoms, whereby votes are split between two provinces. Normally, these provinces are trusted players and/or leaders of the kingdom that can be counted on to be active. Sometimes, these votes are shared between a leader and a large province during wars to create Unbreakables due to the +10% Defense bonus conferred to monarches in War/Hostiles.

The way this system works is that if Province A and Province B are meant to be sharing votes with Province A being the main monarch, then each province would vote for the other, and Province A would ensure that he gathers enough votes on himself to be the monarch. When Province B requires monarchy however, he will switch his vote from Province A to himself and thus gain the monarchy.

However, this may lead to the kingdom page showing 2 monarches present in the kingdom until Province A is updated.