Chapter 20: Promotion from Settlement to Village
I awoke with Jaesmin’s arms draped over me. I stared at the ceiling for a bit, thinking. There was a lot to do today, but I was so damn comfortable. The air had a slight chill, but Jaesmin’s body radiated enough heat to make it perfect.
We would finish the alchemy shop early this morning and then switch to the inn. We needed to furnish the inn and kitchens…that was going to take another trade mission to the city. It was an oversight on my part…ovens, silverware, plates, cooking utensils…
Our trade caravan was due back today, and I will send them back out. The gnome cook was due in two more days so we could get a temporary kitchen set up. That would hopefully appease the grand master cook. With Galana back, I would make another attempt to harvest trees from across the river. Manto, Sanso, and Galana should be enough defense against any threat the goblins proved to be.
Dressing, I talked idly with Jaesmin about the town residents. I didn’t reveal that she was pregnant. That was a surprise that I wanted her to learn on her own…however, the programming worked in that regard. “Tallis, are we going to finish the inn and alchemy shop today?” she asked as we left.
“Definitely. I am going to have Sanso work on the foundation for our new giantkin today as well.” I paused in my step. “No, he will start on the enchanter’s tower, excavating the three level basements. I think I will draft up some new house plans for our incoming giantkin and build Galana something more suitable.” We waved to town folks as we made our way to the site and began to utilize the lumber present to finish the alchemy shop. I examined the building when we were done.
Very Rare Alchemy Shop, Health 122,500, Armor 30, Skill Bonus +17% to potion crafting speed and potency
What! I went to my sheets to figure out the changes. The health was supposed to be 50,000…ah, we had a significant bonus from my building skills and materials used…the 17% that was supposed to be just 10%...it was a mix of the same things…just not as potent. It wasn’t a large structure, but it was definitely the jewel of our small village. Town folks walked by and confirmed my suspicions. I went to my interface to see if it raised our village’s quality.
No? That can not be right. Fortunately, I caught Simba prancing by and stopped him. “Simba, why didn’t the village quality increase after we completed this alchemy shop? I mean, it is exceptional.”
Simba sat on his haunches and lectured me, “The NPC recruit system has had three major adjustments. The first was the cost of bidding on the NPCs at the auction. The second was the multiplier. And the third was eliminating temperament from the description. The last two are in your town interface.”
I opened the town interface and went to the tabs. Oh shit! There were dozens of updates and notifications in each of the tabs. I went to the chart for the number of NPCs I could bid on.
TITLE
MIN POPULATION
NPC Auction Bids
Settlement
20
3
Village
100
5
Town
500
10
Large Town
2,500
15
Small City
7,500
20
City
37,500
30
Metropolis
187,500
40
Capital
937,500
50
World Capital
4,687,500
100
So this had changed, but I didn’t quite remember the original. Simba interrupted, “There should be a message in there noting that the game’s AI has initiated NPC migration mechanics based on war, prosperity, and living conditions. The NPC auction allows population centers to draw in NPCs to fill missing roles. Players like yourself can utilize it to occupy population centers. When the game launches, NPC cities will compete with players rather than get the leftover NPCs from the auction as well. There should be another tab with the new modifiers.”
“So right now, players are not competing with NPC cities?” I asked.
“Yes. There are only two hard-wired players currently utilizing the NPC auction site. You and one other. This is a big advantage since you will not have to start over like the other testers.” Simba finished.
“This seems like something my AI companion should have informed me of immediately,” I said with some irritation.
“Well, if you had read all your notifications, you would have found that your AI guide companions now require prompts to relay information. We are no longer providing free advice.” He returned smugly.
I thought for a minute and then asked, “Does this include your own development? You have not bothered me in a while for a spell, and I have not seen you committing mass genocide on the local squirrel population.”
“Yes! You need to give me a command to level up!” He moved to rub himself against my legs and started purring.
“Can I just order you to give me important information when needed?” I asked, ignoring his obvious plea to be released to attack.
“No. Only direct questions will be processed. However, you will have access to the world’s internet once the game launches. There are already 5000 wikis out there about the game.” He said, sounding agitated.
“Fine, Simba, go level up and remind me to get you a new spell in a few days.” Simba launched himself off the ground to pursue a brave chipmunk I had not noticed.
I looked at the NPC auction modifiers. It had been called a multiplier before, but now it was just a simple plus or minus to auction bids. Lord’s Call, my ability, was listed, giving +2 bids. Town quality had everything from -50 bids for war-torn ruins to +20 bids for utopia. Checking, and my town now fell under Above Average Living Conditions, a +1 modifier. So that meant I should have 6 bids…yes that was how many I had used.
My town population was currently at 109, though and I was still designated as a ‘settlement’. It took a few minutes to find the correct tab and find out why. To become a village, I needed a town management building…town hall, castle, manor, or similar structure. I tried to promote my residence to a manor, but it failed to meet the structure minimums. Well damn. I closed the interface to ensure that was all I needed to promote to village status. I would need to explore these tabs again as they were constantly evolving.
With Jaesmin in tow, I went to finish the inn. We had just started when a huge commotion came from the village center. I could see Galana mounted on her steed. She had returned with the trade caravan! I rushed to see her and made sure everyone returned safely. The townsfolk were crowded around the general store as the expedition unloaded a multitude of goods from wagons and magic storage bags. I found Galana and talked with her off to the side. She started the conversation.
“It went well, Lord Tallis. We set up a trade contract for lumber from Barrington and traded almost all our goods. I have 1,930 gold, 2,800 silver, and 8,091 copper coins to add to the village treasury.” She had a smile on her face. That was fantastic! My money troubles were over.
Well, it was only about 20 platinum coins, but this hard currency should alleviate our coin problems. She continued, “We have a quota of hides and meat to send to Barrington for the lumber. It is only about two days of harvest for us, so I didn’t think it would be an issue. We also bought up quite a bit of miscellaneous items to populate the general store.” She indicated the people unpacking.
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“You did phenomenal Galana. Unfortunately, we need to outfit the new inn with cast iron ovens and supplies so they can operate. Our cook will be here in two days.” I said somberly. I wasn’t going to send Galana away, though. The new giantkin was coming in two days as well. He could be the caravan guard.
“I got those things, Lord,” she said with some humor in her voice. “I probably got a lot of things you hadn’t thought about. The entire town came together before I left, and we put together a sizable list. I got just about everything.”
I was a little shocked. “Damn. Consider your wages tripled, Galana!” I said extremely happy. There was a management tab for NPCs in my town. I opened it. Galana had shown herself valuable and extremely loyal. The promotion tab was extremely complex. You selected a title for a position, put it into an organization chart, and then selected the duties, budget and operation parameters. There were a whole bunch of preprogrammed positions.
I paged through them and was deciding between either Captain of the City Watch or Master Constable. The Master Constable had more freedom than the Captain in the preset settings, but Captain of the City Watch was a flashier title. So I swapped the names and assigned Galana as my Captain of the City Watch with a monthly budget of 20 gold. In the organizational flow chart, she answered directly to me. She was now responsible for law and order within the Malcum’s limits. She had permission to hire up to 20 full-time town guards and rule on minor crimes herself.
Galana looked puzzled for a moment before kneeling before me. “Lord Tallis, thank you for the esteemed position. I will discharge my duties to the best of my abilities!” She stood and crossed her right arm across her chest in salute.
“We are going to harvest some trees from the forest. Go find Sanso. He is working on the Enchanter’s Tower. You two should be able to guard me while I work on the opposite shore.” I gathered a few townsfolk to pull the logs across as well.
Soon, I was on the far shore with Galana and Sanso as overwatch. They scared off two small parties of Darkskull goblins, injuring a few and killing five. The goblins were all level 45 and had terrible gear, nothing salvageable besides 20 to 40 silver coins each. I did take one wound for 354 damage, so they were no joke. I felled 12 large trees before my axe durability gave out. I would need Manarag to repair it. This should get us enough lumber for at least a week after it was milled.
It was late in the day as the townsfolk worked on the massive logs in the mill. Jaesmin brought me a late lunch, and together with Sanso, we checked on the Enchanter’s tower. Sanso had finished the three sub-levels, and with my guidance and spells, we smoothed out his rough work. I returned to my residence with Jaesmin, and she made dinner while I opened my town interface.
I needed to assign duties to a few townsfolk. I started with Elice. She was promoted to Master of Coins, a fancy title for the town’s banker. I gave her a 50 silver coin monthly wage. She would continue to run the general store as well. Next up was Sanso. I promoted him to High Wizard of Defense. It was a manufactured title on my, and his duties were limited to the construction of town buildings and aiding in defense. I did double his wage as well.
For Curraen, I promoted him to Guild Master of Leatherworkers. I gave him a pay boost, and he now would oversee all tanners and leather workers in the city, granting them permits to practice their craft. I did the same for Manarag, Guild Master of Smiths. That was all I wanted to do in the interface tonight.
I started eating a baked chicken with vegetables that Jaesmin had prepared, which was actually seasoned! I wanted to draft a new residence for Galana and our future giantkin tonight. After eating, I went to work on the plans. At least, it would be just one set, and both warriors would receive identical residences. It took only six hours before I was finished. It was a mix of using the interface and actual drafting work. I identified the plans.
Rare Giantkin Townhouse, Health 8,000, Requires Masonry:Foundations 23, Masonry Structures: 23, Woodcraft: Caprentry 23 (+20% Bonus to Stamina, Health and Magic Regeneration for Giantkin race)
That was fantastic! With the build bonus, that might get over 30%! I wanted to work on a town hall administration building, but the sun was already starting to crest. If Sanso, Jaesmin, and I all worked together, we could have completed both structures in short order. I decided to put both structures near the center of town, adjacent to each other.
As we toiled the day away, I found out the negative side of assigning titles to NPCs in my growing village. They came to me with their problems. Galana was first. She wanted to establish a regular mounted patrol to the west. I had to open her interface and give her permission to do so.
Next was Curraen. He wanted me to set the fees for registering new leatherworkers, and once again, I just gave him permission to do so. This went on all day. Constant interruptions required me to enter the interface and give them permissions. I was fine with it as I needed to break to let my stamina and magic replenish, but if this continued every day and every time I bestowed…oh!...light shines on marble head! My organizational flow chart had everyone reporting to me! Well, let us fix that!
I decided the old woman, Gwen Hallo, I had met and who had passed on the responsibility of the village to me was going to be our Master of Guilds. All Guild Masters would have to go to her from now on. After doing this, my day ran much smoother.
We finished both giantkin structures by the end of the day, but I was feeling some fatigue, having drained my magic and stamina so many times during the construction. Excitedly, I analyzed the buildings.
Rare Giantkin Townhouse, Health 16,700, +31% bonus to stamina, health and magic regeneration for giantkin race
Rare Giantkin Townhouse, Health 16,300, +32% bonus to stamina, health and magic regeneration for giantkin race
Simba was nearby, so I asked why there was a difference. We built the structures in parallel. He told me there was a multitude of factors. Most likely, it was due to the differing quality of lumber used. I checked the wood with my lumberjack skill. Yes, I could see that. Some of the supports on the unit with less health were slightly inferior. Ok, I would need to be more focused on materials in the future. I selected the best trees when I cut them down yesterday, but the milling process had some variance. So many damn layers to this game!
Galana had also arrived riding her horse with three other city guards mounted. “Hi Galana! This is your new house! You can pick either one!” I said, hoping for a positive reaction. She cried instead. I nervously looked around until I realized it was tears of joy. She dismounted and hugged me, smothering me in her chest, before checking out both units and selecting the unit with the slightly higher recovery bonus. It was a good day!
The townsfolk were also making requests for new residences, but I just referred them to the Guild of Woodcrafters, which didn’t exist yet! Hopefully, that confusion…my interface chimed, and I opened the message; I had been promoted to the Guild Master of Woodcrafters by Gwen! Damn it! I would dump the title on someone who deserved it while I could and ignore the requests for now.
The townsfolk had a party in the square that night, and I was glad to see everyone, including Manto, who was smoking a pipe and drinking heartily. I retired with Jaesmin after putting in sufficient face time. That night, my drafting efforts focused on a town administration office building. What should I design? Jaesmin sat at the table with me as I bounced ideas off her. Her feedback was limited due to her AI knowledge, but it was still helpful.
I eventually went with a town hall concept. Its first floor would be a nice reception area with a guard station for six city guards. The second and third floors would contain 13 offices each for administrators. The building was going to be all stone. I didn’t know if my concept would work, but I liked it in my head and put it into drafting the plans.
Rare City Hall, Health 80,000, Requires Masonry Foundations 23, Masonry Structures 43 (Bonus +12% to City Population Morale, +2% Tax Revenue)
A 43 was needed for Masonry Structures! Why? Oh, maybe the height of the building? Did I have the skill to build this? I checked all my skills.
Skill
Level
Axe
13
Ag
Axe: Two Handed
15
Str
Air Magic
2
Chan
Air Magic: Force
2
Str
Air Magic: Lightning
1
Spd
Analyze
16
Int
Artistry: Carving
13
Chr
Artistry: Drafting (23)
42
Int
Cooking
6
Ag
Earth Magic
41
Mag
Earth Magic: Stone
41
Con
Laborer
17
Str
Leadership
18
Chr
Masonry
30
Str
Masonry: Foundations
29
Con
Masonry: Structures
24
Stam
Nature Magic
13
Mag
Nature Magic: Plant
13
Chan
Ranged
35
Ag
Reading: Common
3
Int
Riding: Land
40
Stam
Spirit Magic
2
Con
Spirit Magic: Life
2
Mag
Woodcraft
28
Chan
Woodcraft: Carpentry (23)
27
Luck
Woodcraft: Furniture
12
Char
Woodcraft: Lumberjack
7
Stam
I lacked the skill to build the building! My skills had jumped, but I was behind. My best bet to raise it was to gain some levels and add my skill points from leveling to it. I really wanted to increase the ‘settlement’ to a ‘village’. It would give me two more bids in the NPC auction, and as Simba had mentioned, I had a cheat when adding powerful NPCs. As I was pondering this, I got hit with a system-wide alert.
Worldwide Notification: A Planer Incursion Event will be Tested in 48 hours. A timer window is available to players. It is highly suggested you find refuge in large cities before the timer hits zero.
What the fuck was a planar incursion?
PLEASE NOTE THIS STORY IS ONLY POSTED BY THE AUTHOR TO HIS PATREON, ROYAL ROAD AND SCRIBBLE HUB. IF YOU ARE VIEWING IT ON ANOTHER SITE IT HAS BEEN STOLEN WITHOUT HIS PERMISSION.