Nice update, but threadmark?
Could really use a threadmark for this chapter though. I wouldn't have noticed the update if not for checking to see the vote count.
@NewRole umm it looks like you forgot to threadmark the last update.
Woops. Fixed! I appreciate everyone turning out and voting/discussing even after I forgot the threadmark.
Looks like we are fully benefitting from "Daughter's First Puppy" status.
Technically, you're Daughter's
Second Puppy, as Sophie is the first. Though the Sheik was much more hands-on in teaching her how to train Sophie.
The funny thing is that Guilds should, in essence, function like unions.
So we have the opportunity to make an union of an union? Heh.
There's been a lot of discussion of unions, but my observation on Guilds in Innworld is that they're... more like plot devices than actual entities.
Historically, one of the main functions of guilds was to license businesses. If you wanted to set up shop as a blacksmith, you had to get approval from the blacksmith's guild, meet their criteria for quality, and if you violated enough rules they'd kick you out and you'd lose your livelihood. They were more akin to regulatory agencies than unions or trade associations. City governments liked this arrangement because it meant they didn't have to pay to check that every baker in the city was using wheat and not sawdust; the Baker's Guild would take care of all the bureaucracy for them.
That's... not really an issue in Innworld. Guilds (at most) will certify someone at a certain level of competence (Street Runner/City Runner/Courier for Runners, Bronze/Silver/Gold for Adventurers), but most of that service is obviated by the existence of levels. You don't need the bureaucracy of people who
really understands baking to investigate bakers; you can just have a [Baker] swear on a truth stone that he is a [Baker] and he's not violating any laws or doing anything that would be unsafe to his customers.
The Adventurer's and Runner's Guilds in particular function more like Uber/Lyft than a trade association. They're a coordinated hub that assigns tasks to independent contractors and extracts fees/dues as part of the transaction.
None of these things are like unions.