

There was a small group of people that from the start didn’t agree with the customs and religion of the Perisnoian People. The kingdom had absorbed a few smaller tribes and villages early on. This house held rule until 592, when the last king had no heir to the throne. Macarius Melandrius was crowded in the year 755. House Melandrius was the first to rule the kingdom. The Kingdom of Perisno was once a glorious and prosperous empire, until the Great war with The Klymorian Empire.

History records it as the one true kingdom within the continent’s borders. It officially became a Kingdom around the year 795 BE. does it really do so little? Does anyone have proof that it does adjust war declaration chance? Curious what other information might be out there.The Original Kingdom of Perisno was made up by Perilo (original Humans). I know some modules use RtR for other things, but for the base game. RtR defines how quickly major faction troops' morale is reset to 0 (in situation when they have negative morale because you are fighting their "comrades" It very slightly affects lords' default decision making on matters such as "who should receive this new fief our faction captured?" Higher RtR encourages lords, who switch factions, join your faction rather than some other faction (and we all remember what kind of lords switch factions a lot) It can't be larger than 30, or kings will not accept you as a lord It slightly helps you convert certain lords the classic way (who does this in PoP anyway?) It helps a female PC persuade her husband to rebel

This is not just in PoP, incidentally he looked into the scripts for the base M&B game as well.

It even says so on the M&B wiki ( ).īut apparently this isn't true? Leonion, a regular on the Taleworlds forum and the producer of many script-tweaks, said in this thread ( ) that, as far as he can tell from the script triggers, that RtR influences. I had always been under the impression that a higher Right to Rule reduced the chance (along with other factors) for other factions to declare war on you. I started looking into Right to Rule in more depth, in response to someone's post on the Prophesy of Pendor forums at Taleworld, who was looking for ways to avoid the crap-shoot that is the inevitable dog pile of war declarations upon you when you try to found your own kingdom.
