Richard commits his general’s bodyguard. In vanilla, they’d plow through. In 1.5, my Voulgier (armor-piercing, anti-cavalry) brace properly. The impact is a slaughter. Richard dies. His bodyguard shatters.

Caen falls. I execute the prisoners. The world excommunicates me. But in 1.5, excommunication no longer triggers instant civil war if your faction leader has high piety. Mine does. I ride the thin line between heresy and conquest.

With his king dead and his army routed, England fractures. Scotland invades from the north. The Pope, fickle as ever, lifts my excommunication because I built a cathedral in Rheims (another 1.5 tweak: public order from religious buildings now scales correctly).

The year is 1204. The Papal States have called a Crusade for Cairo, but King Richard of England, my ally in name only, has sailed his entire army to the Holy Land, leaving the British Isles lightly defended. As King Philippe II of France, I see not a sin, but an opportunity.

By 1220, London is mine. The victory video plays. But I remember the real war—not the conquest, but the desperate, rain-slicked siege of Caen, where a single unit of spearmen held a gatehouse for three minutes against my knights, because in patch 1.5, morale doesn't break easily.