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The intent of this system is to allow PCs to be able to select town rulers.  While the system looks superficially like democracy it's much closer to an oligarchy - only PCs get to vote, reflecting their greater influence in the world (whether as warriors, traders etc) compared to their NPC friends.
#REDIRECT [[Settlements]]
 
The system will take some tuning etc. 
 
 
== FAQ ==
 
Q: Which areas of the server are covered by the citizenship system?<br/>
A: Cordor, Bendir Dale, Guldorand,  Brogendenstein, Myon, Devil's Table, and Sharp's District.
 
 
Q: What is affected by the tax rate?<br/>
A: Quarter and shop upkeep (the amount you have to pay per month to keep ownership), and the proportion of proceeds from selling items in player shops that goes to the government rather than the owner.
 
 
Q: Where do I find the registrars/trade czars?<br/>
A: They should be in fairly logical places - their titles vary per town.  So try looking in central places in the various towns
 
 
Q: The election hasn't started, and a Real Life month has passed! Is there a bug?<br/>
A: No, they are determined by IG Year, not a straight RL month. A game year lasts 33.6 RL Days.
 
== Becoming a Citizen ==
 
* Speak to registrar NPC.  Pay 10k, you're now a citizen of the town.
* Taking citizenship at a town removes any citizenship of other towns. If you had prior citizenship elsewhere, you cannot run or  vote for a year in the new town.
* Citizenship will expire if you do not log in for 13 game months. (approximately 37 RL days)
* See [Harpers[http://wiki.arelith.com/Harper_scout]] and [Assassins[http://wiki.arelith.com/Assassin]] for unique benefits to the citizenship and election system for assassins and Harpers.
 
== Electing a Leader ==
 
All citizens will be able to vote for their leaders.  Leadership posts for
each community are decided by the admin team.  There may be a single monarch
or mayor position, or a council of equals.
 
 
Any citizen may challenge for the top job if the last election was held more
than one game year ago.  To do this, they speak to the registrar, and that
triggers an election.  During the next game month(Roughly 3 Real Life Days), any citizen can speak to
the registrar to vote.  At the end of the
election, the person or people (if there are multiple posts) with the highest
vote counts gain the office.
 
You can also register for an election early, putting your name in with the register whenever you wish before an election can happen.
 
 
No more than one vote per candidate per player (and you can't vote for one of your chars using another char, either).
 
 
While an election is active, all citizens will be reminded of the fact when
they log in (and when an election is called, it will be declared server wide).
 
The counts will be secret until the election is completed.
 
=== Roleplaying elections ===
The system does not represent democracy. Not every character can vote freely, only those privileged few that are influential, wealthy enough and paid for their citizenship. All those unrepresented masses of [[NPC]]s don't get a vote at all.
 
Not all voting have to be fair and nice either. There is plenty of space for lying, intimidating, bribing or even assassinations of opponents. 
 
 
:"All governments exist at the tolerance of the majority. Dictatorships, Fascism, Communism, Monarchy, Oligarchy. All forms of government are backed by the force of the majority OR the force of a minority AND apathy from the majority. People as a group are ruled because they choose to be. The "election" process in settlements is just a mechanic to show who holds the most power.
 
 
 
== Being a Leader ==
A leader can do lots of stuff, as follows.
 
 
=== Appointing Officers ===
 
A leader, through the settlement's register, can create divisions and appoint people to work for the government. The employees of the settlement can be given nearly any power the leader can perform. Both divisions and employees can be given salaries, which are taken directly from the settlement's bank account.
 
Divisions can be furthered managed through the -faction system.
 
=== Taxes and Money ===
 
Taxes have a base rating of 10% - this means 10% of every shop or quarter sale
goes to the government, and 1% of a quarter or shop's full value is paid to
the government each month (including cost of improvements if any).  The
leader(s) of the community may alter this base tax rate by talking to the
Registrar.
 
Any community leader can withdraw or deposit funds from/to the community bank
account.
 
If the settlement bank balance reaches zero or less, then:
* Salaries will stop being paid until the balance becomes positive
* Trade (see below) will continue.
* Exile list is cleared.
* Current leaders are removed.
 
=== International Relations===
 
Community leader(s) can open trade agreements with other nations.
Opening a trade agreement means that the other nation will be able to buy
resources from you (and, if they reciprocate the agreement, your nation will
be able to buy from them).  See below for more on trade.
 
Finally, community leaders can make their settlement a vassal of another
settlement, or release a vassal they already have.  Community leaders have
control over vassal states: they can banish/remove leaders.
 
=== Punishment ===
 
Community leaders can banish individuals. This must be interacted with the individual to be banished in person before being put into effect.
 
Community leaders can also evict the resident of any quarter or shop in the town.  This also must be RPed with interaction just like banishing.
 
 
=== Writ System ===
 
Settlements with three or more leaders require writs to perform certain actions. Only settlement leaders have to use writs.
 
These actions are:
* Exile and it's Removal.
* Setting up or Removing Trade Agreements
* Setting the buy/sell prices through the trade czar.
* Releasing a shop or quarter.
* Giving a salary to a division or an employee.
* Withdrawing Gold
* Changing an employee's rank.
* Removing an employee.
* Removing a division/rank.
* Making the settlement a vassal state.
* Modifying Taxes.
* Giving a power to a division/employee to do the any of the above.
 
The settlement leaders can get around the writ restriction by giving themselves the power to perform any of the above actions through the settlement's faction, either directly to themselves or through their rank. Powers given through divisions will not allow the settlement leader to perform those actions.
 
To give a power without using a writ, the settlement leader needs both the power to give powers and the power they wish to give.
 
Any of the above actions will ALWAYS require a writ against another councilor.
 
Writs are also required when performing the above actions within a division faction.
 
If the settlement leader is also a division owner, they do not require writs when performing these actions.
 
== Being banned or exiled ==
Characters that are banished from a settlement by its leader or someone empowered to exile are unable to enter the town and its immediate premises, unless they are in disguise and pass a disguise (bluff or perform) check. They will continue to make checks until they leave, and will be thrown out if they fail one.
 
 
Each settlement can only exile so many people. Cordor's cap is 3 + 1 per every 20 citizens, every other settlement is 3 + 1 per every 10 citizens.
 
 
 
 
=== Tips what to do when individually exiled===
:'' written by DM_Iron''
If you are exiled from a city and you feel it is unwarranted, some possible solutions could be:
* Send a note through a citizen or an unexiled person to the leader of that settlement stating your need for repentance and ask if there is a fine you can pay to allow you 'supervised' movement through his territory.
* Capture a hostage and explain to the leader of this settlement that you will torture/kill/give a comfy pillow to this hostage until he lifts the exile. Then do a prisoner exchange. Or if you are truly devious, tell him you will exchange the character/hostage at the settlement only, giving you access to the areas you can't get to as you give the hostage back and sneak through his/her territory to the 'restricted' areas. Of course, portal lenses might be helpful to get back out of there...
* Approach a disgruntled citizen and sponsor him to become the next leader. Approach the existing leader stating you will withdraw your support for his rival if he/she allows you passage through his/her territory.
* Become the champion of that settlement and fight the settlements' enemies. Commission a bard to sing of your exploits in the settlement on how well you have thoroughly trounced the settlement's enemies and you do all this for redemption.
 
These are just a few of the things I can think of off the top of my head. The system will not go away. Accept it. The way it is now, it is probably the best way it can be implemented within the confines of the scripting mechanics of the game.
 
=== Elections while being exiled ===
:'' written by Mithreas''
* Undeniably, if the guards of a city are looking out for you, speaking with someone in authority (in many cases, in front of NPC guards) is breaking your disguise and you should be thrown out.
* Equally, if someone is in power and exiles anyone who might stand against them, then they can achieve 'lockdown'.
 
 
I think that summarises the principle arguments. So here's an Official Ruling (tm). '''It is metagaming to stand for office OR VOTE in a place where you're exiled''' though '''it's perfectly OK to win an election where you entered as a candidate and were subsequently exiled''' (and you can then subsequently take up office, reverse your own exile and probably exile the prior leader!). At some point, I will update the system to make it impossible to talk to the registrar if you're exiled.
 
 
What about avoiding lockdown, then? Well, there are plenty of ways that the situation can correct itself in the longer term if players act that way.
* A player who wants to stand or vote can persuade another councillor to unban them, in places where there are several
* If a leader gets too ban-happy they'll reduce the population of their settlement and weaken it to the point where it's less fun to play, particularly in the more remote locations. If nobody visits, it's going to get boring - and new leadership will likely come to pass as the old leader gets bored.
 
There are other ways too, but I'm not going into detail. In short, the solution to a perceived flaw in the implementation of a system is NOT to compromise RP by ignoring NPCs and players should instead accept the limitations of the simulation and where applicable make clear, simple and concise suggestions for how the system can be improved.
 
== Trade ==
 
(NB - this section under construction).
 
Every settlement needs an amount of certain basic resources, determined by the
number of exiles it has + settlement storage (See below for specifics).  These basic resources are food, cloth,
metal, wood and stone.  Settlements may obtain these items by two means: PCs
selling or donating them through the trade czar, or trade with other settlements (or the outside world).
 
 
All trade is managed by the community leader(s) and may be divided to others at the leader's discretion.
 
=== Trade Management ===
 
Community leaders can set their buy/sell rates for each resource.  On Day 1, Month 1, Hour 0 of each game
year, the stockpile of resources held by each settlement will be reduced by
5,000 times the amount of exiles. If the amount currently stored
falls short of the amount needed, the settlement will enter economic decay (see running out). To avoid this, citizens can buy surplus stock from other settlements they have trade agreements with and donate/sell it in their own settlement before 1/1/0.
 
 
=== PC Deposit ===
 
The Dev Team will maintain an inventory of items that 'count as' one of the
five basic resource types.  For example, nuts, berries, meat and fruit would all
count as food.  The Underdark might have mushrooms that count as wood, and
both hardwood and softwood will count as wood too.
 
PCs speaking to the Trade Czar in the settlement will be able to gift or sell
resources to the settlement.  If they choose to sell, the buy price is derived
from the price the community leader(s) have set for buying goods.
 
=== Manual Trading ===
 
Any citizen of a settlement may buy resources from the Trade Czar, or from a settlements Trade Czar that is set to "Sell To" their settlement. Such purchases are paid at the settlement's sell price. The resources are a bundle that weighs its value: Ie, 50,000 units of food will weight 50,000 pounds. These resource bundles can then be sold or donated to any Trade Czar. It is quite possible for people to make a profit in this manner.
 
Mithreas said:
:"Trade czars will currently
:- not sell resources needed for this year's year end (so your floor is 120k in your example)
:- not buy resources if it would reduce the treasury below 10k (so you can't bankrupt a settlement just by selling things to it - but you can get it close to bankruptcy). "
 
=== Settlement Offered Storage ===
 
Settlements can invest in how much storage they offer citizens:
 
LOW: 3 additional items, 5000 of metal, wood, and stone.
MED: 3 more items from low, 10000 metal, wood, and stone.
HIGH: 3 more items from med, 15000 metal, wood and stone.
 
These resource cost increase if the settlement has 70 or more citizens, depending on the amount of citizens.
 
Formula is Base resource cost/70 * Number of citizens. If lower then the base cost, then the base cost is used.
 
The resources are paid up front and every new year. If you're upgrading, the upfront cost is the difference between what you currently have and the new level of investment.
 
Settlement leaders will find the option through their registrar.
 
If the settlement goes from a higher to lower investment: You can retrieve your previously saved items, but you can't save anymore items until your below the current limit.
 
=== Running Out ===
 
If a settlement is unable to source the resources it needs then it will suffer
a reduction on all tax income each year until the situation is remedied, to
represent the decay of the community as an essential resource isn't available.
 
This could become crippling quite quickly if it's not remedied...
 
Decay causes that when rent that is paid on a shop or quarter, a % of the rent vanishes into the ether, determined by the number of stocks not met and the number of years they have gone unmet.
 
[[Category:Game mechanics]]

Latest revision as of 15:50, 25 May 2019

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