Local Societly/Population's Mood after an Uprising

I have played this game since the end of 2015, and I have a pretty good experience about the mechanisms of Call Of War. But, there's something that's weird and illogical for me. It is about the event named "Uprising" .

We all know that, in Call Of War, an uprising consists in the revolt of a province whose morale is lower than 25% (40% in some cases if I recall correctly and its joining to another country(usually a neutral one).

What I don't understand is the fact that when one or more province(s) uprising is successful, it's percent of morale stays the same, with the possibility of a new uprising.

I think that the morale should be increased to a percent where the uprising possibility is null, because, if we think logically, the population/society of the respective province should be calm now that they proclaimed to join the country they wanted and are now under the respective's wing of protection.

For example, in one of my games, a war between Saudi Arabia and an African country had been going on for a few days. I was playing with Persia. The African country managed to conquer the entire Southern part of Saudi Arabia(Oman included) and sent its armies to the North. The morale of the most conquered provinces was the standard 25% and some time later, four of them proclaimed to join my country, Persia. But, their morale percent stayed the same, which is quite illogical if you ask me.

3 Replies

That is wierd because province which revolts to another country every time (I never saw otherwise) has ~35 moral after the revolt. Maybe something else happened there. Perhaps spies or some other events that are able to remove province moral.

I don't think it was a spy, because nobody would set spies in like 5 provinces that mass-revolted...

Indeed, I remember the morale rising to 35% in some cases, but, for instance, in my example it obviously didn't happen.

Good suggestion.


"I came, I saw, I conquered" Written in a report to Rome 47 B.C., after conquering Pharnaces at Zela in Asia Minor in just five days; as quoted in Life of Caesar by Plutarch; reported to have been inscribed on one of the decorated wagons in the Pontic triumph, in Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius, by Suetonius.
"Alea iacta est" Gaius Julius Caesar.

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