Are all realms in your fantasy setting traditional kingdoms or do you like including other types of governments as well?
>>97285981>puckee spamming his commission againhttps://www.reddit.com/r/DnD/comments/1ipl8a9/artcomm_king_edward_vi_of_eredan_by_tomasz_ryger/https://desuarchive.org/_/search/image/HYBKW4xLP1-cLSr0iyVT4Q/>18 times since February 2025
>>97285981Most are kindgoms or principalities. I do have a Venice-inspired republic and one small area with pseudo-democracy, but nothing too weird.
>>97285981My kingdoms are ruled by royal and wise kings descended from high men, greater than their lesser ilk
Theocracies, Empires, Merchant Republics, Principalities
Generally good kingdoms and an expansionist evil democracy.
>>97286420>expansionist evil democracy.Ah, so America.
>>97286439Or Republic-era Rome.
My Kingdom mandate killing of puckees
>>97286456Rome was good though
>>97285981Mostly kingdoms, there is a nomadic army up and about trying to end the world in a vague way that I haven't thought of exactly but that's about it
>>97286465Nah, it was cool but definitely not good.
>>97286473It brought order and discipline to regions that were lacking.
>puckee thread
>>97285981I like to blend it up, but the majority of nations use a standard medieval-style system of rulership based on kings and nobility and all that stuff.>>97286058Shut the fuck up nigger. Not everyone is puckee and 18 posts over the course of a year isn't spam. If anything, you're spamming by constantly posting this retarded nonsense anytime someone posts a picture you don't like
>>97285981Ask the worldbuilding general and stop shitting up the log.
>>97286487Stop derailing the thread. If you want to argue about the moral compass of rome there are better boards for that.
>>97286465>>97286473>>97286487>>97286806https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qc7HmhrgTuQ
>>97285981There's only one realm that's played any significant role in the campaign so far and it's currently in a 3 or 4 way civil war between>The anointed emperor, in an alliance with the new class of bourgeoisie burghers, fighting to wrestle power back from regency council/parliament and reestablish absolutist monarchy, complete with his family's long-standing tradition of demon-worship. >The conservative nobles, who thought they'd firmly secured power during the emperor's minority and are now fighting to bring him back under the thumb of parliament. >The revolutionaries, determined that power should be in the hands of the common people (or at least themselves, as appropriate representatives of tehe common people). They're also broadly determined that the emperor, the nobility and anyone without sufficient revolutionary zeal should be sacrificed to demons, not because they're worshiping the demons of course, the demons are just useful tools.>The northern duke, currently in broad alignment with the rest of the nobility but from a culturally distinct polity and clearly tempted to either secede or conquer the entire empire for himself.
>>97286806Why'd you feel the need to try and continue a short four-post discussion that was already over?
>>97285981>all realms Unlikely. Based on late renaissance and early modernism so there's a lot of shifting monarchies, feudalism, city states, mercantilism and attempts at other models based on theological schisms with the not!pope like Breakers and Levelers. Plus what the Occident, Orient, Savage Lands and the New World are up to. In game variety wise this mostly plays out as different orientations of towns on the hex map and random encounters. Some of the more isolated areas end up being town councils by default with occasional interruptions by larger powers. The players haven't really struck out for any particular faction yet but having their allegiances and reputation preceding them will be more of a thing as the campaign progresses. >>97286806>If you want to argue about the moral compass of ancient political bodies there are better boards for than the thread about fantasy political bodies based on ancient political bodies Nigger you dumb.
>>97285981I hate Puckee more than you can imagine.