![]() Still, it’s important to know which you should look for, which ones counteract each other, and which can hurt you rather than help you. Learned traits develop through life events, random events, education, and lifestyle trees - basically every other trait in the game. However, some good traits like Giant (+6 prowess) and Fecund (+50% fertility) have their benefits outside of your family. ![]() These include Club Footed, Dwarf, and Lunatic. Most of them are negative and govern the character’s appearance and mental state. Otherwise, several appearance traits can pass from parent to child. As long as you avoid characters with bad traits, you shouldn’t run into issues inheriting them. To ensure these traits pass down to your heirs, consider investing in the Blood dynasty tree, specifically the Convergent Blood perk that increases the chance of reinforcing congenital traits by 30%. This method is beneficial for your first character, especially if you don’t start with a wife or heir (or find a way to get rid of them). You can also look for level-three congenital traits when marrying or marrying off your children. These characters have different level traits (Comely and Handsome), which can equally pass down to their children. These characters have the same level trait (Comely), which may level up to Handsome/Pretty in their children. On the other hand, if you marry two characters with different level traits, both have a chance of showing up. That trait now has a 50% chance of “leveling up” in their offspring. If you marry two people with the same level of trait, you’ll see a green arrow pointing up. You’ll know them when you see them, and unless you marry that person into the family, you can easily keep them out of your bloodline. The bad traits work the same way but aren’t worth mentioning.
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