Pendragon Book Of The Estate Pdf 27
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Because I have been mostly playing 10L, I have not been looking at it with the care it deserves. But I agree with Greg and would like to see a little more attention paid to the economics of 10L. So I would be pretty much on board with a book on 10L economics and what has been done.
Having used BoM for the last six years I have to say that it has been surprisingly difficult to find all the necessary information and source documents for 10L. The only reason I'm writing in the first place is that I've read all the books and haven't been able to find the necessary information to import my 10L KAP file into BoE.
And the pdf will be free, so you can't really complain. At least the person who's paying for the pdf gets something out of it - more info, or perhaps a nice PDF, or maybe even a copy of the book, to amuse him/herself if they're so inclined.
I like the idea of a large share holder having a firm grasp on his holdings. What's more, I like the idea that the books are available for free, but there's value added by the PDF that makes it worthwhile for the actual holder to pay for the pdf. It's not really that simple, I don't think, but it's a nice idea.
I think the GPC is the best of the systems. It would be nice to try Book of the Estate. We don't have the £10 manor though. We have two of the £100 manor. One is being used now for a pk, and the other is in the possession of an abandoned knight. We had it for a while but fell out with his family. The knight's sister is having a GPC for us with it.
I like the sound of the BoE. It seems nice, and might be something to try. I have been using the BoE at the table as a guide for two campaigns we are running. It's a very cool idea, and I think it might help me to write the books I need to write.
As far as the nobles go, you have to remember that there are, in general, two systems in place. The big estate system that spread through the 6th/7th centuries and the mini-manor system that is new in AD&D. The big estates were rather unsystematic, as you mentioned, and many nobles would have been split up into a number of manors. The big estates were rarely inherited, as the manors were given to their firstborn sons as a result of the Norman Conquest. That left a large number of nobles who would have seen their lands split up into several manors with various sizes. So the question is not whether the nobles would have done well or not, but rather whether it's the case that a typical (manor-sized) noble would have done well. 827ec27edc