To prove this to myself I actually did some maths. As the potential at the equilibrium is 0, the standard potentials are equal:
Eº1=RT*lnK1/(z1F) (I usually mark the number of electrons with z)
Eº2=RT*lnK2/(z2F)
Eº2-Eº1=RT*ln(K2z1/K1z2):(z1z2F)
The new equilibrium constant should be K2/K1 and not K2z1/K1z2, so really, the number of electrons makes it not additive. Thanks to you two for the help. I usually do this by converting the potentials to eq. constants, but converting it to Gibb's energy and do it like for the enthalpies is good, too.