WI: Selim I Assassinated before Chaldiran?

I've been researching for my TL, and came across a little snippet on Wikipedia that shocked me a bit. In 1514, Selim's army (moving east to invade the Safavid Empire) was moving through harsh terrain, where it was cut off from supply lines. The men became incredibly discontented by this, so much so that the Janissaries even fired their muskets at the Sultan's tent at one point. When Selim learned of the Safavid army forming at Chaldiran, he quickly moved to engage Isma'il in part to stifle the discontent of his army.

My curiosity lies in what happens if Selim is in fact killed in his tent by a severely discontented Janissary guard? What are the effects on history? Does his son, the mighty Suleiman 'the Magnificent' still come to power?
 
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He probably would, given that Selim's brother Ahmet was executed after his rebellion a year prior. I wonder how the history of the Ottomans would've played out had Ahmet or Bayezid's brother Cem had suceeded in usurping the Sultanate...
 
Suleiman takes the throne. As he's around twenty years old, you probably aren't going to see any major power shakeups in the succession.

However, there MIGHT be interesting effects of Suleiman's foreign policy. IOTL, Selim died while planning a war against Hungary--a war that his son essentially wound up obsessively fighting for the rest of his life. Here Persia might just take Hungary's place--while Hungary will still be targeted, Suleiman may be less aggressive, and be satisfied with a good-sized puppet kingdom paying him tribute in the north. So, we avoid the siege of Vienna, and instead see Suleiman attacking Persia. Over, and over, and over.

That may not go well for him.
 
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