Oh, ok. I did understand it that way.
Have fun on your outing.
As for vassalship: two things can happen if you have pressed enough military on a civ you're at war with (few cities left, or an overwhelming army near important city(ies). The civ can offer to capitulate to you, or it can offer a vassalship to another strong civ, which means you're automatically at war with the "protector" as well if it agrees.
In case you manage to let the civ capitulate to you, it will remain a vassal of yours as long its population and landsize is under a certain percentage of the master (yours) civ. I don't get it completely either, since the display-percentages seem a bit buggered, I mosttimes see two times the same notification about landsize compared to the vassal in two different ways. At least how I interprete them. Population percentage always looks good.
There's supposed to be a friendly way of convincing a vassalship upon another civ, but I never reached that stage.
Have fun on your outing.
As for vassalship: two things can happen if you have pressed enough military on a civ you're at war with (few cities left, or an overwhelming army near important city(ies). The civ can offer to capitulate to you, or it can offer a vassalship to another strong civ, which means you're automatically at war with the "protector" as well if it agrees.
In case you manage to let the civ capitulate to you, it will remain a vassal of yours as long its population and landsize is under a certain percentage of the master (yours) civ. I don't get it completely either, since the display-percentages seem a bit buggered, I mosttimes see two times the same notification about landsize compared to the vassal in two different ways. At least how I interprete them. Population percentage always looks good.
There's supposed to be a friendly way of convincing a vassalship upon another civ, but I never reached that stage.
Comment