Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 749: Your name is...

"And then there's the name..."

A convenience name shall be given to the newly developed compartment.

Actually, it's a bad area for these naming senses.

"Wouldn't it be nice simply to have a new compartment or something?

and I just mentioned the initial proposal

"You've decided no! What's that unmotivated and graceful name?!? You're not gonna get any good customers like that!

Anne let me out fiercely.

You don't have to be so lame.

"A name that makes you want to come to the upper echelons..."

"Yes! If I had to be your name, there wouldn't be a woman or a child from a second neighborhood in a third neighborhood, right?

The way you say it makes sense anyway.

"So what about the new parish or something...?

"Like a full road or something? There's gonna be plenty of food."

"Seems safe on Castle Street or something."

"On a non-stinking sewer road. Yeah."

I've named each of them, but they don't come pin by pin.

I'm good at these ad agency guys...

I know a few ways to come up with naming ideas, so I'm not sure if I should try them.

"... I'll think of a name."

Anne with a frightened face thought of naming herself, she told me.

It might be a good idea to leave this place to people with passion.

I feel like I could do a better job of turning to the advice side if they talk to me about my methods.

"So? I figured out the church, the dining room, the sewage, what do you want the whole street to look like? If you're going to decide on a name, you have to know that."

Anne, entrusted with naming the streets, has asked about the "Concept of the Streets". At the end of the day, all the problems come down there.

"Right... how about arranging buildings or something that look just like a second-class neighborhood?

I can also say that it sounds bad to imitate, but it unifies with a design that is familiar to the people of the 2nd class neighborhood.

We can expect the effect of lowering the alarm of prejudiced citizens against third class neighborhoods.

"There's a lot of beautiful, delicious shops and stuff near the offices of the Swordtooth Corps. I might be glad to have such a store nearby!

"You can't. Then the citizens of 2nd class neighborhood will go to the familiar shops of 2nd class neighborhood. How can you go to 3rd class neighborhood, which may be dangerous, when there are only shops inferior to 2nd class neighborhood?

"That's... right"

What Anne is saying is that "the point of appeal to customers is ambiguous".

If it is a place where residents of second-class neighborhoods want to go because they want to feel admired and unusual, then a novel concept is needed.

"The admiration of a citizen in a second-class neighborhood... an unusual feeling... like imitating a street in a first-class neighborhood, for example?

Human beings are also admirers of different things, but also of the world above.

Speaking of the admiration of second-class neighborhood citizens, it would be a city inhabited by nobles and big merchants in first-class neighborhoods protected by thick walls. When it comes to those slightly extravagant experiences, the satisfaction of the guests is also reflected...

"No, none. I can't."

Deny the thought on the way.

"Why? Money issues?

"There's that too, but it's a place. Not enough space."

"Space?"

There's no such thing as a space designer.

This is my bad choice of words.

"By analogy in theatre, the ceiling is high, the stage is wide, and the audience seats and seats are wide apart."

As a third-class neighborhood resident, it's rare that I've been summoned to the other side of the first-class neighborhood wall several times - mostly on less than life-threatening errands.

The First Class neighborhood, inhabited by nobles and big merchants of the city, was just another world for the residents of the Third Class neighborhood, whose roads were swept up on paved with beautiful cobblestones and whose squares were lined with fountains that spared no effort to blow clean water or shrewd mansions with short, mowed, spacious lawn gardens.

Its luxury consists in the "waste of space" typical of the large gardens and lower strata of the limited spaces: the neighborhoods within the walls.

"No, it was quite a big place."

The road is wide, the garden is wide, the mansion is wide. That is the requirement that constitutes the luxury of the city's first class neighborhood, and so the location is not helpful in creating a new compartment with a limited number of places.

We need another "appeal to the citizens of 2nd class neighborhoods" concept.