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Dictatorship

A player's own kingdom, consisting of Sargoth, Tehlrog Castle, Alburq Castle and their respective villages.

Founding your own kingdom is a feature new to Warband. It is the ability to set yourself up as a king or queen of your own fully fledged faction. Trying to conquer land in the original Mount&Blade while being unaffiliated with a leader shows a long text stating that you are a "commoner" and have no right to be "treated as a king".

All monarchs have a claim to the throne of Calradia. In addition to the player's struggles to become the supreme ruler of their own territory, should they wish to do so, they must also compete for the title of King/Queen of Calradia.

In With Fire & Sword, there is no way to found a new kingdom, but rebelling against a monarch for a claimant will create a temporary faction with the claimant as the ruler. Once the rebellion succeeds, the claimant faction will disappear, and the new monarch will rule the original nation.

Becoming a Monarch[]

Before you start your own kingdom, make sure you have a lot of renown, either honor or dishonor (depending on your liking and desired relations), and especially, a lot of right to rule. When starting the game, it is best to first be a vassal of another kingdom, and when you are powerful, revolt and start your own kingdom. This gives you a chance to make friends, who will become your vassals. Also, it will give you a fair fight when you start; a level 5 king is not going to be popular or effective, at least level 20 is recommended.

The first requirement of ascending to the throne is that you cannot be tied to another claimant. In other words, you must not be part of a rebellion or a vassal of one of the current factions. If you already are, there are three ways out: ask to be released from your oath, be denied a fief you requested and dispute the judgment by force, or ask your husband to join you in a rebellion (female characters only). If you are currently questing for a claimant, you can convince the claimant to abandon the rebellion, and you will take over the entire territory you conquered for them at the cost of honor (you will receive the ability to rename your faction and give fiefs to your heroes).

If you did not manage to secede from your liege with lands and are a landless unaffiliated person, all that is required is to start conquering. You need negative relations with a faction to conquer its fiefs. Having solved a dispute over a fief by force or starting a rebellion will lead to war with the faction you're in. If you're not currently at war or in any faction, you can attack a lord or monarch to go to war with the faction; consider that you will lose a lot of relationship points with the monarch, making him your enemy. It is advisable to extort tolls of a caravan from the faction you wish to conquer, this will decrease your relation with that faction by -1, avoid unnecessary relationship penalties with lords/villages, and allow you to besiege that faction's fiefs once you reach negative relations. Once you have a castle or town, you will be given the opportunity to name your new faction and begin your rule.

A good strategy can be to wait until a castle or town has just been captured and then siege it, as it will only have a small garrison of around 50-60 troops for castles and 80-90 troops for towns. This is useful as you will be fighting with no allies for your first siege.

Note: You cannot attack the castles or towns of a faction with which you do not have a negative relation. If you attack a lord, village, peasant, or attack/extort tolls from a caravan, you will lose relation with their faction and will then have the option to besiege castles and towns of that faction.

Ruling[]

Your Court[]

When you start your own kingdom, you will be told that a court has been set up in your kingdom's capital. This capital is automatically assigned to the first town or castle you obtained and still possess. If you do not have any towns, the court will be held in the first castle you obtained. The court can be moved at any time, though certain materials are required (Tools and Velvet).

The court is where your main affairs are conducted, where your minister stays, where your feasts are held, and where vassals go if they wish to join your kingdom. The court is where all decisions are made, from giving fiefs to vassals to choosing a new marshall to conquer foreign lands.

The Minister and Ruling Options[]

As a ruler, you have many new options. Your first task is to appoint a minister to look after your lands; this can be a hero, a wife, or even a prominent local (randomly generated NPC). However, it is not advisable to choose the prominent local, as you will be unable to take full advantage of minister features (heroes are automatically chosen if you have them in your party). By talking to this minister, you can conduct different affairs of state. Diplomats can be dispatched to the other factions to declare war or attempt to get other monarchs to recognize your legitimacy. Fiefs can be distributed amongst your vassals, and the current marshall and minister can be changed. If you chose the prominent local, you will only have the option to change the marshall and minister.

If you choose one of your heroes as a minister, you may swap them back into your party at any time. It is common amongst players to appoint a hero that doesn't get along well in the group as a minister, as they will no longer quarrel with other heroes. It is also possible to hire a new hero at the tavern just to make them a minister, as there is no difference between a high-level and low-level hero as minister. This can be useful if the player wants to keep their current heroes.

Vassals Joining the Kingdom[]

Kingdomlord

Lord Doru wishes to join the players faction. Note the change in Lord Doru's prefix before you even allow him in the kingdom.

As a ruler, you will often find landless lords from other kingdoms in your court, hoping to become your vassal. This can happen at random for the most part, but it is also heavily influenced by their personality, their experience with their last kingdom, your renown, and how many unassigned fiefs you have. You can try to get other nobles to defect to your cause by talking to them privately and asking how they feel about their liege, but do not expect a high success rate; while the nobles may dislike their current ruler, most dislike being branded a traitor even more. Much like recruiting lords for a claimant's cause, trying to get other lords to join your kingdom is heavily dependent on renown, number and location of fiefs, kingdom's total troop size, affection, your charisma, your persuasion level, and mere chance. A notable exception is your husband when playing a female character, an option appears when talking to him that instantly makes him join your faction regardless of your relations with him.

You may also grant one of your heroes a fief, automatically making them one of your vassals. They will leave your party. While heroes can become your most loyal lords, you are also making the choice to remove a customizable, powerful ever-growing troop from your party. On the other hand, you will have that powerful hero with another army in the field at your disposal. Be careful when appointing heroes as lords, as two who don't like each other may carry their grudges into the field, allowing one to possibly defect to another kingdom. Also, appointing a commoner hero as a vassal will cause a large, retroactive penalty in relations to most of your current and even future vassals. It is recommended to make someone of noble blood a vassal. However, most of them will only recruit faction-specific troops (e.g. Matheld will only recruit Nordic units), so if you don't want a vassal recruiting say, Khergits only, and you think it is worth it, appoint a commoner instead. You could also consider Rolf and Lezalit as vassals: they are both non-faction-specific nobles.

Relations With Your Vassals[]

As a ruler of your newly founded kingdom, you will find the game even more challenging. As a vassal, one of your ally lords defecting to an enemy can be a positive thing, allowing you to capture their fiefs and possibly claim them for yourself. When you are king/queen this changes dramatically - you'll need to keep a watch on your vassals' "relation to their liege" (open "notes", go to characters and select the lord). You cannot keep every and all lords happy, as some will like honor while others will dislike honor. You must choose carefully. Even former heroes may defect to another kingdom, and with this, you lose the fiefs they hold to the kingdom they defect to. However, taking action and preemptively removing the vassal from his post will anger the other lords of your kingdom, so the more lords you have, the harder it becomes to rule your kingdom. When you are at the near-end of the game and have only one or two kingdoms left to conquer, the number of vassals of the rival kingdom(s) will be incredibly high compared to the early start. At this point, you must be ready to face armies of 4000+ men, but when done correctly you can easily muster a force of 6000+ men, depending on the number of vassals you have.

Capturing other lords is not recommended, as this will lower relations with these lords and make it harder for you to convert them to your cause. Not all lords like this idea, but the majority will thank you, and when you reach +50 relations with a given lord getting them to defect to your side will be fairly easy, but it is also dependent upon the relationship they have with their current liege.

The more vassals you have, the more your vassals will fight amongst themselves, weakening your nation from within. Try to resolve fights amongst your vassals and hold regular feasts to improve your relations with the lords of your realm. Listen to your current lords when giving out new fiefs to your vassals. Each time you give away fiefs your relation with all the lords who disagree with your decision will drop by 1 to 3, and in the long run, this can destroy your nation by causing your vassals to defect to your rivals. Since the size of a lord's army is directly proportional to the number and wealth of his fiefs, it can be beneficial to only have a few lords, but give them several fiefs each. This avoids the problem of taking massive relation drops with the entire realm when assigning a fief, without sacrificing the strength of your realm too much.

Managing the relationship with your lords is difficult but can be coordinated with a little thought. Giving a lord (not a hero) a fief will increase the relationship with the lord by 10 and slightly increase relations with that lord's friends by 1 or 2 points, but reduce your relationship with most other Lords by 1 to 3 depending on their relationship to the receiving lord. If a lord is defeated in battle, you will lose one or two relationship with him as well. Giving yourself fiefs gives no negative or positive relationship with any lord.

Certain Lords with unpleasant personalities will lose relationship points faster than others: it is a good idea to give any 'danger' Lords only village fiefs, so that if they defect there is no loss of land, as the village is tied to its castle or town.

All of these factors are dependent upon vassal personalities. The more you learn about the quirks of every vassal personality, and the more easily you are able to identify them, the easier it will be to manage your kingdom. For example, a kingdom full of good-natured and upstanding lords will not only be harmonious, with no new rivalries, but they do not become upset when someone else is granted a fief, and their relationship with the player cannot decrease below 100 if the player's honor is 300 or more. However, they are very difficult to convince to defect from their kingdom. On the contrary, pitiless, sadistic, and quarrelsome lords are easy to make defect; a relation of -10 with their liege may be all that is required to get them to renounce their oath, while with more chivalrous lords the bar is higher. Despite this, they are much more difficult to manage, and quick to betray the player (as well as other rulers).

Tips and Tricks[]

  • Use opportunities! If you find a castle/town with a garrison of around 100 or less, take it! If the faction owning the town is being ripped to shreds by other factions, even better! Know the flow of war, and when factions are weak, use that opportunity to get a head-start on your kingdom. However, you may be at war with two factions, as the faction it is originally from will declare war to "regain lost territory" (shown below).
  • When taking your first settlement, target a location in which the current owner was also the initial owner at the start of the game. This will make other kingdoms less likely to invade you. For example, if you take Sargoth from the Kingdom of Rhodoks, the Rhodoks will retaliate, but the Kingdom of Nords will probably also declare war against you to take their city back or "regain lost territory", leaving you at war with two factions. Also, the Nords are known to declare war to cleave power from another faction.
  • There is a chance you can persuade a lord to defect to your kingdom before you have a kingdom at all, if you can persuade a lord who owns a town, you can defend a +300 garrison town instead of the 0 garrisons you get when you conquer a town, making your early kingdom easier to defend. Try to convince a lord who owns a strong town, likes you, and has a negative relationship with the current liege.
  • If you have lords seeking to join your faction whom you don't want to accept (e.g. because their personality makes them more trouble than they are worth), instead of telling them their service is not needed and driving them to another faction, just ignore them at least until your throne room is so full that you have to talk to some of them to make room for lords you want to let into the faction. The more potential enemies you can keep off the field, the better.
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