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pathfinder:campaign_systems:strongholds:stewardship

Stronghold Stewardship

Overview

As the ruler of a stronghold you can't do everything alone. Well you can, but if you have people to help you, you get better results. There are three main roles and two subsidiary roles that can affect the way a Stronghold is run. The more suitable each person is for the role they hold, the more effective your stronghold management will be.

If you control a large area, separate domains or more than one settlement, you will need an administrator to oversee them for you. It might just the senior ranking military commander in the area (certainly in rural and countryside areas) but you might also choose to appoint a specific surrogate leader (especially if it is a large area or you want to reward someone with a title) to oversee things on your behalf.

One of the things you, and your stewardship committee, must do is maintain a balance between Economy, Loyalty and Stability. As soon as they get out of balance, your population starts to get edgy and argumentative.

Balance

When you build a Stronghold you must keep Economy, Loyalty and Stability in balance – When you start off, this means they must all be within one point of each other - for example 1,0,0 or 5,6,6 or 22,21,22 are all in balance. Anything outside of that balance (such as 7,8,9) means that there is tension in your stronghold and things start to go wrong. Just out of balance might mean the price of cabbages goes up and your commoners get hungry and grumpy. Right out of balance could mean a full blown civil war. And we all know how the Wangate Cabbage Shortages of ’03 led to the revolution that overthrew the Grand Poobah of Wang … you have been warned!

As your stronghold gets bigger, it becomes a bit more resilient. For example a quickly quelled food protest in the docks district, might not be enough to upset the traders in the Merchant District, or the Rich Folks in the Central District. This is measured by Variance which is examiner later.

Stewardship Committee

These are the people who oversee the stronghold and make day to day management decisions, they work in background and their skills are used to judge how well they do. This can include the PC who owns the town, NPCs or a collection of PCs - however, the basic day-to-day stuff still happens in the background.

  • Executive: The face of the stronghold . The one that people look to for leadership, directions and guidance. How the population react to their leader is based on Charisma. You can choose to use one of three charisma based skills (Diplomacy, Intimidate or Bluff) to manage your city. Be careful though. If you use Intimidate people follow you from fear, Bluff means you are tricking them into following you – Diplomacy means they follow you from respect. Intimidate suits an Evil Overlord, Bluff suits some sort of hidden and underhand government, while Diplomacy is honourable, above board and people follow though respect. And I will be checking your alignment and how you RP the role. Anyhow, for the example later, I am going to assume that Diplomacy is the norm and the other two are exceptions. Possible Titles: Lord; Lady; Mayor; Governor.
  • Chancellor: The person who looks after the money. They know what taxes are due, who owes what, and who is trying to take advantage of you. They look after your stronghold’s taxes, businesses, vaults, debts and treasury. This is a professional skill, and normally it is measured on Profession(Merchant). You would have to make a very good case for any other standard Profession sub skill – although I could see someone with a niche skill, such as Profession(Accountant), in this role. Possible Titles: Chancellor; Treasurer; Steward; Quartermaster.
  • Advocate: To make the right decision you have to know the mood of your people. It doesn't matter how good your diplomacy skills are, it is easier to sell people a version of something that is palatable to them, and the Advocate provides feedback from the populous to help make those decisions. In Evil or Hidden regimes, feedback is just as important – if only to tell you where the rebels are, or who is starting to uncover secrets. This ability to feedback good information about your population is measured by the skill Knowledge(Local). Possible Titles: Councilor, Magistrate, Bailiff.
  • Moderator of Churches: The moderator of Churches oversees the Council Of Churches and advises on whether new religious organizations should be permitted in the stronghold. It is effective when you calculate variance.
  • Marshal: The Marshall oversees the officers, Troops Guards and belonging to the stronghold, and ensures they behave in the way s/he wants. It is effective when you calculate variance.

Stewardship Modifiers

CouncilorStewardship modifierNotes
ExecutiveDiplomacy OR Intimidation OR Bluff modifier -
ChancellorProfession(Merchant) modifier -
AdvocateKnowledge(Local) modifier -
ModeratorSee the section on Variance Min: At least a temple, or equivalent, in settlement
MarshalSee the section on Variance Min: Defence value of settlement = 4+

Add the Skill Modifiers from each of the main primary councillors, then using the Total calculate the Stewardship modifier by applying the following formula - (Total-10)/5 EG Total Steward Skills = 15 then Consumption Modifier = -1 (20=-2, 25=-3 etc)

Variance

All strongholds start off with a variance of 1. After that, two things affect variance - the size of the stronghold and the attitude of its rulers.

Stronghold Size

The larger the stronghold is, the harder it is for unrest to spread, so for every 20 size points (ie one full city district), add +1 to the variance.

Rulers' Attitude

If the rulers are consistent (lawful) the population have a better idea of the rules and the more the rulers 'care' about their people, the more tolerant the residents will be. So basically, Lawful and Good increase variance, Chaos and evil reduce it. Calculate the council's overall alignment by 'adding up' the alignments of the various councillors - any neutral element of an alignment is ignored, then Cs ans Ls cancel out, Gs and Es cancel out - and take the remainder.

Examples

Council Overall Variance table.

LG, +3 NG, +2 CG, +1
LN, +2 TN, +1 CN, -1
LE, +1 NE, -1 CE, -2

Managing the Council's Alignment.

There are two minor posts on the Stronghold council, Moderator and Marshal, that can be used to help manage the Council's Overall alignment - however, they must have the right levels of influence to be effective.

  • Marshal: You may count the Marshal's alignment IF the Stronghold council controls at least once defence point per Semi-Wilderness Hex, Rural Hex and Urban District under its control.
  • Moderator: You may count the Moderator's alignment IF the Religious Buildings in a Stronghold generate (at least) one point of loyalty per Semi-Wilderness Hex, Rural Hex. Urban Hex and District under its control.

Kingdom Events

Kingdom Events Table

30 + Excellent
20 - 29 Beneficial
10-19 OK
5 - 9 Mishap
0 - 4 Bad
<0 Very Bad

Modifiers

  • +/- Stewardship
  • -10 if you exceed your variance

Ranks and Titles

Conventional Stronghold

You are the head of your stronghold and are known as Name, Lord Stronghold (e.g. Henry LeMaistre, Lord Middlemarch) regardless of your actual title. As far as the Common people go – you are a Lord, and that is all that matters. Other Aristocrats will probably know your place in the pecking order – if not their Scribe/Herald/Squire/Secretary will either know or be able to find out using Knowledge(Nobility) and/or Knowledge(Local).
Stolen Land

Free City / State

A Free City is a single Hex that has been given autonomy to run itself, while a Free City State has a few associated rural hexes. ‘Run itself’ doesn't mean a full blown democracy, rather those Aristocrats (Officer or above on the Social Scale) who reside in the city get to ‘choose’ the Mayor and the rest of the City’s Leaders/Officers.
Stolen land

pathfinder/campaign_systems/strongholds/stewardship.txt · Last modified: 2019/06/01 17:04 by 127.0.0.1