Careful what you wish for
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someone take a sword to charles pl0x…
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A+ character concept.
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I wanna run an adventure where a dragon secretly runs a bank, and nobody can tell because it acts exactly like every other banker.
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I wanna run an adventure where a dragon secretly runs a bank, and nobody can tell because it acts exactly like every other banker.
In Shadowrun universe, many corpos are run by dragons.
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The king answering with anything other than some variation of “Because I ordered you to” broke my immersion.
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https://www.youtube.com/shorts/-d29z8G6U28 And here this exact post is, animated with the original voice acting!
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In Shadowrun universe, many corpos are run by dragons.
In actuality, most corpos are run by people. Lofwyr, whose corporate umbrella includes 4758 companies, is an outlier and should not have been counted. /s
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The king answering with anything other than some variation of “Because I ordered you to” broke my immersion.
One of the reasons I can never stomach Nick Bostrom’s Fable of the Dragon Tyrant because it depicts the idea of a stoic king who cares about his people.
(Also, glosses over completely how an ageless soceity would be stacked under feudal-capitalism)
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The king answering with anything other than some variation of “Because I ordered you to” broke my immersion.
Many powerful people like to make people believe (and possibly believe themselves) that they’re just rulers. And it’s just plainly more effective when your underlings are well-informed of your intentions (assuming you’re not trying to set them up). e.g. imagine if the knight thinks that a dragon is a direct threat to the king and burns down the countryside to hunt it (any means necessary etc.), when in reality it’s not a direct threat to the king at all and you were just supposed to keep the countryside safe from dragonfire.
Of course, the entire premise is that it’s not obvious to the knight why a dragon must be killed and what are acceptable means to achieve that. e.g. in Faerun’s Sword Coast, you’d expect that every knight is well-informed about this.
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Did kings hoard all the wealth? I thought kings had a monopoly on violence, not necessarily wealth
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It’s almost as if the stories of dragons were an allegory for the king or the one sin charge
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Did kings hoard all the wealth? I thought kings had a monopoly on violence, not necessarily wealth
You need massive amounts of wealth to gain and maintain a monopoly on violence. So they did both.
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I wanna run an adventure where a dragon secretly runs a bank, and nobody can tell because it acts exactly like every other banker.
No spoilers, but you should check out the Sword Interval webcomic.
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You need massive amounts of wealth to gain and maintain a monopoly on violence. So they did both.
Also if you possess a monopoly on violence wealth is not difficult to obtain
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Did kings hoard all the wealth? I thought kings had a monopoly on violence, not necessarily wealth
The wealth was needed to pay soldiers. You needed soldiers to make sure people did what the king wanted, such as people paying taxes to get wealth. The whole thing with taxes and needing gold as money was basically invented for supporting militia, according to some.
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Did kings hoard all the wealth? I thought kings had a monopoly on violence, not necessarily wealth
Armies are expensive, and war is REALLY expensive.
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Also if you possess a monopoly on violence wealth is not difficult to obtain
And once you have that wealth you NEED a monopoly on violence to maintain it, which requires more wealth, and so on.
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It’s almost as if the stories of dragons were an allegory for the king or the one sin charge
I too have played the Shadowrun Returns series
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Did kings hoard all the wealth? I thought kings had a monopoly on violence, not necessarily wealth
IIRC everything you had was considered to be used by permission of the king. Like, he ostensibly owned everything and was just letting you use it.