> After you deal with yet another local crisis, the king himself summons you to his court.
> He explains that he's very impressed by your work and wants to reward you for your heroism.
> At the same time he's wary of powerful individuals, who answer to absolutely no one, doing whatever they want in his kingdom.
> He seems to be particularily upset about you killing archduke von Murderstein lately.
> While the king agrees that the archduke was a dick and likely a threat to the kingdom, you could have at least tried to consult with authorities before dispensing vigilante justice and killing an important noble.
> So the king offers you a compromise.
> Your party gets official titles and a permission to continue doing what you do, along with a wage and recognition at court.
> However, from now on you will be followed by a royal investigator, who'll make sure that you're operating within king's justice and not doing anything stupid or treasonous.
> Also, naturally, you will have to answer to the king himself and follow his orders.
What do, /tg/?
Depends. Does the king have the adventurer levels to personally stop me? How about adventurers married into the family who can reasonably stop me?
>>50977180
Not op, but safely assume any king has means to stop you forcibly.
Personally? I would reject the kings offer and continue my exploits in secret by donning disguises while operating in public areas. Masked hero campaign is anot engaging hook.
>>50975665
>What do, /tg/?
Probably roll with it. Now I'm getting paid to kill off evil fucking nobles and scheming viziers and shit. We're the King's personal hit squad now. I'm down for that.
No deal. I didn't spend this long bringing down evil and government corruption to become part of the government.
>>50978145
>>50978937
These guys get the idea. While the king has good reasons to be worried about adventurers, it may be possible that he's nipping an inquiry into his past in the bud. What dark, juicy, potentially profitable secrets could he hide?