Eu4 Examination | System
He refused to sit for the exam. The Emperor, backed by a new faction of scholar-bureaucrats called the declared him a rebel. In a brutal, two-year campaign—fueled by the new +10% National Tax Modifier from the efficient new magistrates—the central army crushed the hereditary lords.
When a flood destroyed the rice fields of Huguang, the local examiner-turned-governor didn't wait for the capital. He enacted the Tiao Tiao Liang tax reform, shifting the burden from the drowned fields to the silk merchants. The event pop-up read: “Local Talent Solves Crisis.” Options: [Gain 50 Administrative Power] or [Lose 1 Stability]. The Meritocracy chose power.
Ignore it. (Lose 50 Meritocracy, gain 5 Corruption.) Option B: Root it out. (Lose 100 Administrative Power, trigger a Rebel faction of ‘Disappointed Scholars.’) Eu4 Examination System
A Chronicle from the Forbidden Archives, circa 1620
The Disappointed Scholars rose. They did not fight with swords. They fought with ink. They published seditious pamphlets. They called the Emperor a tyrant. Stability dropped by 2. The Mandate of Heaven began to decay. The final failure of the Examination System was its own success. It produced brilliant governors, but no loyal soldiers. He refused to sit for the exam
The Ming conquered west, absorbing the steppe tribes not with cavalry, but with Confucian schools. The was halved. For the first time, the game’s scorecard showed Ming as the number one Great Power.
He did not send it. Instead, he cheated. He bribed an examiner. When a flood destroyed the rice fields of
A brilliant young man from the peasantry named scored the highest marks in a century. He was assigned to govern a backwater province in Yunnan. There, he discovered the dark secret: the Examination System had created a new nobility—a Mandarin Aristocracy . The sons of scholars were given secret tutoring; the sons of peasants failed. The +1 Yearly Legitimacy was a lie, because legitimacy no longer came from the Emperor. It came from the Gazette .
The Emperor chose Option B.
In the year 1444, the drums of chaos beat against the gates of the Forbidden City. Emperor Zhu Qizhen, the Zhengtong Emperor, sat on the Dragon Throne, but his grip was weak. The great fleets of Zheng He had been scuttled. The treasury bled silver to bribe the Mongols. And worst of all—in the eyes of the Confucian scholars—nepotism and hereditary warlordism had rotted the bureaucracy from within.
The old Nobility’s influence dropped by 15%. The crown’s rose by 5%. And Tuo Zilong’s head adorned the southern gate. The Golden Age of Paper (1460-1500) For forty years, the system worked better than any edict before it.