GamesStrategyNorlandLibrary heists, bandit bribes, and multiple orgasms: how I became a happy king in medieval strategy sim NorlandWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
GamesStrategyNorlandLibrary heists, bandit bribes, and multiple orgasms: how I became a happy king in medieval strategy sim NorlandWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Long Jaunt)

Sometimes I wonder what kind of king I’d be, and every now and then a game comes along that makes it abundantly clear I’d be a terrible one. Currently, that game ismedieval kingdom sim Norland, which feels like a mashup of Crusader Kings, RimWorld, and Mount & Blade. It’s got strategy, settlement-building, management, and as Fraser found out, lots of personal drama andno small amount of vomiting.
I’m not sure my kingdom is going to last long enough to experience any of that: I haven’t even technically begun the game when I make my first big mistake. I choose a scenario that starts me off as a king with three daughters, which seems like it’d be ideal: one daughter could be the princess type blessed with charisma and social skills, another could be a shadowy spymaster to handle intrigue and secret plots, and the third could be a bold warrior leading my armies. The four of us will rule this realm, and when I finally croak my most worthy daughter will inherit the throne.
What I fail to notice is that in this scenario all three of my daughters are justone year oldat the start of the game. That means when I begin playing I immediately discover my kids (I’ve named them Inky, Dinky, and Pinky) can’t do a damn thing until they grow up and become teenagers.
Right off the bat, King Chris has to do everything himself with no help from his heirs. Giving instructions to builders, doing research, undertaking missions, diplomacy with neighboring lords: that’s all on me and me alone. No wonder I almost immediately develop a negative mood modifier called “fatal fatigue.” Sounds grim. I hope it’s not fatal.
(Image credit: Long Jaunt)

So, my first act as king is to trudge out of the town that has nothing built in it (because I’m the only one who can tell people what to build) without an army (‘cuz I haven’t assembled one yet) and deliver a big pile of gold to the bandit camp.
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Tax Return of the King
(Image credit: Long Jaunt)

I need help, desperately, and I finally get a bit of luck: a freelance lord shows up in town. His name is Lyutovoy, but I rename him “Helpy” because I don’t know how to pronounce Lyutovoy and because I immediately burden him with 95% of the tasks in the village, including educating my kids. All I’m gonna do myself is try to finish reading this book about rye.
(Image credit: Hooded Horse)

I put down the perpetually unfinished rye manual and run off to get married. Who is my wife? Oh, I dunno. Some lady named Gorana. I just need another person in my town who can be assigned tasks until my irritating children get older. I notice in her bio it says she is “craving excitement.” I have some extremely bad news for her, unless she gets a thrill from watching a guy slowly fail to read a farming book.
Murky mercs
(Image credit: Long Jaunt)

It’s also time for a little revenge. Those bandits I made rich earlier? They’re now doing so well they’ve actually formed a little mercenary military unit. I’d love to destroy their camp but I still don’t have an army, so I just… hire them. I hire the bandits to destroy their own camp.
I put my mercenary Helpy in charge of my mercenary army, and send them out to stab their former bandit comrades to death. It works great, and I think it qualifies as a strategy: paying people to destroy the people I paid earlier, even though they’re mostly the same people? It’s expensive, anyway, and expensive things are usually good. That’s what my constantly fainting king thinks, anyway.
Speaking of unconscious monarchs, my king has a dream the next night and awakens with a new purpose, or as some might call it, a quest: to “unite 15 Norland provinces under my control.” I just bust out laughing. That’s plainly not going to happen. It was a major undertaking for King Chris to successfullyread a single book.
(Image credit: Hooded Horse)

I do need to deal with the other provinces, though, because most of them hate me. That’s what happens when you constantly hand over massive sums of gold to bandits: rich people get angry. A few opportunities arise to win some hearts and minds, however. One kingdom asks for help, fearing they’re about to be plundered (probably from all the well-paid bandits in the area) so I send Helpy out (with all the well-paid bandits I employ), and have him raid another bandit camp on his way back. Yep, I’m a hero.
Me, the guy who almost failed to read a single book about wheat, staging a library heist.
Me, the guy who almost failed to read a single book about wheat, staging a library heist.
Another country really,reallyhates me, so I prepare to send them huge gobs of money before I notice, whoops, I am nearly out of gobs. But I can’t just leave a seething enemy king out there plotting my downfall, so I look over my options for a preemptive strike. Assassination? Kidnapping? Poisoning? Gold heist?
I may not be a great king, but I do love irony, so I choose the option that seems funniest: stealing books from their library. Me, the guy who almost failed to read a single book about wheat, staging a library heist. It detracts from the crime a bit that I send my wife to steal books instead of going myself, but I’m pleased to see she also delegates the task, hiring “cutthroats” to steal five books while keeping her own hands clean. Now, all that’s left to do is read all those books, or more better still, pay someone to read them for me. Hey, Helpy… you busy?
Unfortunately my demo of Norland doesn’t let me play much further than that, but I sure did have a great time being a terrible king. Norland will enter early accesson Steamin May. I’ll see you again then, Helpy.
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Alan Emrich, the game designer and writer who coined the term ‘4X,’ has diedCivilization 7 senior historian prays it’ll be a ‘gateway drug’ into textbooks: ‘I teach undergraduates in my other life, and my God, man, they don’t read’
Alan Emrich, the game designer and writer who coined the term ‘4X,’ has died
Alan Emrich, the game designer and writer who coined the term ‘4X,’ has died
Civilization 7 senior historian prays it’ll be a ‘gateway drug’ into textbooks: ‘I teach undergraduates in my other life, and my God, man, they don’t read’
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