Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 641: Discovering Peasants Who Can

"Then what do you do? Do you plow directly, if not bid"

It urges Paperino to show a proxy in the way he says it will, on reason.

"No way. In the end, I think there's nothing better than leaving it to the one who can make it better."

"And say?

Consider the direction of the answer a little before explaining it.

"For example, what do you do when you decide who you can do with a mercenary regiment? You leave it to the one who pays the most wages?

Kilik explained the mercenary's flurry with a slight frown.

"Well, I think employers who don't pay what they pay are going to die, but what they want from their leaders is to let us win. I can't be on the losing side. They negotiate with their employers to take their wages, they're war resistant. It's especially important to be resistant to war. If you lose, you die."

The Sword Tooth Corps was sometimes used as a mercenary.

Jilboa has a variety of excellent qualities as a leader, but above all because he was a winnable commander, people have come together.

"How do you tell if you win or lose?"

"Well, that's a rumor. The guy who can win has been winning for a long time, and you'll always hear rumors. Collect the rumors properly and get under the one you can. If you can't do that, you can't do it as a mercenary."

"I mean, you're surprisingly seco."

"Mercenaries who don't like it usually die prematurely. Well, a compliment."

Sarah pointed her mouth and said, while Kilik laughed out loud.

"Mostly, that's what I thought. I think cultivating farmland is a war. It's a battle against nature. If I leave it to the guy who can't win, I lose. Except that you have money and that you can win. So I disagree with the bidding method, and I want to look for someone who can win and leave it to me"

"Well, maybe so. But how do you find the guy who can win?

The analogy story with the war seemed easy for Kilik to understand.

The explanation could also be moved there, to a discussion of concrete measures on what to do in the future.

"Some hands call from the church, but I want to look in this land first"

"Is he there?"

"I also wonder if there are any peasants in this land who can do that"

Kilik and Paperino seem to have doubts about looking among the peasants.

The two of them are neglectful of the farming scene, so maybe they have some anxiety that they can't make a decision.

"What, even if you're neglectful of agriculture, you can do it"

That said, show a bunch of parchment on your desk.

"Uh, the amount of wheat and..., that's a tax record. of this village."

"Yes."

The three people on the spot looked at each other to explain that something might be found by following this record.

"From the tax records, is that it?

"That's right. It may be difficult to be precise, but I think I can put on an approximate nose and eye."

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"First of all, it's a good policy to leave farmland to the guy who can, but we're trying to discuss how to find out who can."

While holding white ink, ask them to look around and give their opinion.

"As an agricultural administrator, what kind of guy do you think you can refer to?

The answer to that was also threesome.

"Isn't that someone who can manage their farmland properly and name their harvest," said Paperino.

"You mean the guy who can give you the harvest anyway," Kirik said.

"Someone who can get along with everyone and make lots of delicious crops," Sarah said.

Hear everyone's answers and write on the blackboard, "Someone who can give you a harvest”.

"Right. Different way to put it, but in short, anyway, you can say that the guy who can give you a lot of harvest is the one who can. At this point, let's do that.

Then, if we follow the wheat tax records, we'll know who can be a farmer.

So, would the village chief have been a peasant who could?

Soon, there will be a voice to deny.

"The previous village chief happened to have a lot of land, didn't he? There's got to be someone who can do it even if the land is small!

"Right, Sarah's right"

"In other words, if you go back to your tax records and calculate the amount of tax per certain size, you can discover who's farming efficiently!

Paperino is just as strong on numbers.

After I was excited to raise my voice, the tone of that voice dropped, as I noticed something.

"But sometimes the land can take a lot of wheat even if it happens to be narrow because of its abundance, right?

Paperino's question is correct.

There can be ample potential for that farmer not to be more productive, but just more productive of the land.

"Yes. So focus on the amount of change. Return to your tax records to see if you are growing or decreasing your tax collection. If it's stretching, it can be estimated that agricultural technology is stretching, and if it's decreasing, it's just consuming local power."

"So, but there must be a good year and a bad year for the harvest!

"It gives the average of the overall yield and corrects"

"Uh, I mean, what does that mean?

Was the argument I had with Paperino just as difficult, with Sarah and Kilik turning their gaze for explanations?

"Simply put, let's decide if it was better or worse than everyone else,"

"Isn't that obvious?

"Right, it's not a good idea to take the obvious for granted. But, well, that's what I mean. If you look at the tax records, there may be people somewhere in the narrow land who grow wheat exceptionally well. Let's find it."

"I see. That's how you use records. I think I can apply a lot to church records."

Did Paperino and others appreciate it or report it to the center immediately?

However, there are many challenges to this approach.