Kingdom deeds
The village system, even though efficient, is limited and could be improved to match the medieval setting: feudalism.
Contents
Renaming
Authority
In the medieval era, aristocracy was the structure of power. The mayor was seen as 'head of a household'. He was the 'director' of the 'employes' of a place. The power is described as a lord giving a fief to a vassal. Hence, if a king gave a plot of land to an aristocrat the lord is the king, the fief is the land and the vassal is the aristocrat.
'Levels' of lordship
Deeds
Rename the Village deeds category to Kingdom deeds. The deeds themselves needs naming too. I propose 4 types: Communes, Villages, Cities and Provinces. They would be as so:
Size | Name | Cost | Citizens | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Size 5 | Small commune | 0.25 gold | 10 citizens | |
Size 10 | Commune | 1 gold | 40 citizens | |
Size 15 | Big commune | 2.25 gold | 90 citizens | |
Size 20 | Small village | 4 gold | 160 citizens | |
Size 30 | Village | 9 gold | 360 citizens | |
Size 40 | Big village | 16 gold | 640 citizens | |
Size 50 | Small city | 25 gold | 1000 citizens | |
Size 70 | City | 49 gold | 1960 citizens | |
Size 100 | Big city | 100 Gold | 4000 citizens | |
Size 200 | Province | 400 Gold | 16000 citizens |
Inheritance system
Different type of kingdom deeds are allowed to overlap. Overlapping makes a deed part of a structure of deeds. The biggest deed sets the "100 tiles apart" distance and the inheritance. Each deed may have it's different name and mayor but the mayor of the biggest deed sets the rights to be inherited to the smaller deeds. Upkeep can be shared or not.