Font Size
15px

As Karl watched the heavy, four-wheeled Orc caravan slowly rumble out of the Necro-Mall’s imnse docking bay—a sight that signaled massive cash flow—Leo stepped forward, holding a worn leather-bound notebook. "My Lord, I’ve just been inford. The Kobold villagers have successfully arrived and been escorted to the residential zone."

"Good. Have soone ensure the deliveries start imdiately," Karl instructed, his voice low and firm. "Food, water, and basic necessities like clothes. This is non-negotiable PR." A staff mber imdiately broke away to execute the order.

Leo’s brow furrowed, addressing a more imdiate logistical gap. "Now that the villagers from the Dark Forest have settled here, my Lord, we don’t have anyone constantly delivering sulfur. We have effectively lost our primary supplier for that chemical base."

Karl smiled, a slow, predatory movent on his pale Ghoul face. "We haven’t lost a supplier, Leo. We’ve gained a permanent partner in a position of dependency. We simply need to establish the terms of their new arrangent. We’ll offer them two paths to choose from."

Karl began enurating his strategy. "The first: they continue the Dark Forest mining. If they choose this, we will gladly loan them the proper equipnt—larger wagons, better protective gear against the sulfur smog, proper tools. They remain independent contractors, but they are now heavily leveraged by our assets. This is my preferred outco, as it minimizes our ongoing personnel managent and payroll costs."

"The second path," Karl continued, raising a finger, "is direct employnt within our new Strategic Resource Procurent Agency (SRPA). This cos with a stable salary of one gold coin monthly, a managed ti schedule with shifts, and guaranteed free food and accommodation for their families. However, that salary will be subject to a twenty-five percent deduction—a calculated cost-recovery chanism—to cover the collective feeding and housing of their families until they are self-sustaining. They gain stability; we gain reliable, accountable labor."

"I don’t think the Kobolds will jump at the employnt option, My Lord," Leo said, skeptical. "They might view that as you stripping away their only source of independent inco, leveraging their debt against their own family’s welfare."

Karl nodded, acknowledging the common, simplistic Beastkin mindset. "Exactly. And I’d prefer they take the loan. It saves us the ti, capital, and manpower required for managing a large, unskilled payroll. They take the equipnt loan, they produce the sulfur, and we maintain low-overhead supply chain stability. It’s a win-win for Necro Corp."

Leo shifted the topic, his concern evident. "On another note, My Lord, since the war is breaking loose, the other Kobolds will take it that you’re accepting refugees. Isn’t that a bit concerning? We may have to cut deep into current resource ways in order to feed a potential influx of tens of thousands of refugees."

Karl smiled wide, a chilling display of strategic satisfaction. "No, Leo. Accepting these refugees is not concerning. It is a major asset acquisition. It is a huge, cost-effective way of securing the Kobold’s imdiate trust in our establishnt and demonstrating our stability amid regional collapse. More importantly, it instantly creates a substantial new custor base for our guns and—more critically—a captive, trained labor pool."

He began to gesture around with sharp, precise movents of his fingers, painting a picture of future industrial expansion. "The Kobold race is genetically suited for focused, repetitive labor. We can establish dedicated, specialized factories inside our territory and hire them en masse as specialized workers. Think beyond just raw materials."

"Take, for example, a clothing factory, where quality control is minimal but volu is high. A vehicle chassis factory, requiring repetitive assembly. A dedicated steel refinery. These are labor-intensive operations that will be run with near-zero friction. Furthermore, beyond manufacturing, we can introduce a basic education system—math flash cards, reading materials, writing materials—and sell that too. We invest in their stability, and they invest their future wages back into our economy."

"Yes, we have to absorb the initial investnt of feeding at least twenty thousand refugees for a short period, but the return on this stable labor and consur base will be exponential. This is long-term leveraged growth, Leo, not charity."

Karl then circled back to the Orc negotiation, integrating it with the war strategy.

"We can quickly end the Beastkin’s racial wars, or at least control them, by simply introducing the flintlocks and controlling their supply. And finally, for the Orcs. We are going to give Schalezusk’s group a formal channel as our first official weapons distributor. It is vastly better than direct sales. If we expanded directly, we would have to establish and staff new sales branches, costing us imnse resources, ti, and exposing us to unnecessary political risk. Why pay for expansion when you can make your most reliable client pay for it instead?"

He offered a final, chilling, corporate grin. "The Orcs will profit handsoly from every single weapon sold, solidifying our relationship and their market share. Crucially, they beco structurally dependent on us for constant resupply, maintenance, and ammunition. They’ll beco a self-financing, high-margin, chain distribution network, tied to us not just by loyalty, but by pure comrcial necessity. We gain an entire sales and logistics system without spending a large di on infrastructure expansion."

Leo considered his Lord’s layered insight—a strategy turning refugees into laborers and clients into distribution partners—then nodded, the pragmatic acceptance visible in his pale eyes.

Karl’s expression softened into a look of determined finality. "Now, we will make our introductions. Let’s go et our new friends, Leo. Prepare the car; you’re driving this ti."

"Yes, My Lord," Leo said, turning back toward the vast, silent complex to execute the order.

One week had passed, and the word had spread like fever across the region. The Lupen’s blatant attack on Hearthglen and the massacre of at least one hundred Ursarok civilians and nobles had fractured the established order. This sparked region-wide chaos, especially among the Ursaroks, many of whom now enlisted to finish the deed once and for all.

In every settlent and town, the grief rapidly curdled into rage. Many Ursaroks protested the lack of decisive action by the High Council, which they viewed as too slow and too interested in protecting their own holdings. This discontent imdiately led to the formation of local militias, drawing young, furious recruits away from official army channels.

In the dusty courtyard outside the massive Ironhide barracks, a young Ursarok recruit nad Bartek signed a paper with a trembling claw before turning to his older, scarred comrade, Darg.

"They talk of ’protocol’ while our blood is cooling in Hearthglen!" Bartek spat, adjusting the ill-fitting leather pauldron he’d been given. "The Council is too fat to march. I’m signing with the Ironhides, not the old guard."

Darg, who had seen several smaller border wars, rely squinted at the horizon. "The Council cares only for their silver mines, not your fury, young cub. But fury is all we have left and it is a good thing."

News also spread fast of the Kobold army staging area near the border. For the Ramari rchant Houses, this was the realization of their greatest fear: open war on their trade lanes. They were never a beastkin with an expertise in combat, nor did they possess the military culture to withstand a siege.

Panic seized the Ramari settlents. Citizens evacuated swiftly, moving north-west toward the Ursarok bordering hills, seeking whatever tenuous security the Ursarok territory might still offer.

At a busy crossroads, a small, well-dressed Ramari rchant desperately tried to maneuver a cart full of silks and fine ceramics past a surging crowd of refugees. "Two gold coins! Final price! This silk is worth five, but I must move it! Move, move, the Kobolds are at the border! Get out of my way, you great shaggy brute!" he shrieked at a lumbering Ursarok who rely brushed past without a glance. The rchant sank onto a crate, the value of his entire livelihood dropping with every passing hour. He knew the Kobolds valued iron over silk, and the Ursaroks needed soldiers more than ceramics.

anwhile, the neutral Frogkins saw opportunity in the rising conflict. Frogkin rcenaries, recognizable by their dark, slick leathers, began showing up at every military staging point, seeking to enlist in whichever faction offered the highest coin. The price for a full platoon of Frogkin skirmishers had quadrupled overnight, ensuring they would soon be fighting against their own kin—a matter of simple business.

Skirmishes were already occurring between the Lupens and Ursaroks along their shared border, with heavy casualties on both sides. What surprised the beastkin factions was the sudden, formal military alliance between the Lupens, Foxkins, and Kobolds. While the biological connections between the three races made the partnership understandable, the speed and decisiveness were a shock. It was clear that this alliance aid to establish a new dominant force in the region and eliminate the Ursaroks’ ancient control.

Not many sought to be involved in such wars, and those without a direct stake had wisely joined the Vanguard in the south, far from the escalating northern front.

One thing was clear about the Kobolds: they also desperately wanted the new, rumored weapon the Lupens used—the elental staves supplied by the Foxkins. It was a perfect battlefield equalizer, allowing less-trained troops to deliver devastating ranged attacks.

The Ramaris also sought this technology, but the Foxkins were silent, refusing the Goatfolk’s attempts to buy the weapons for an exorbitant price. The Foxkin, led by Lady Shiri, had clearly decided to leverage their technology for political and military dominance rather than imdiate profit.

As the sun set on the western horizon, the main Lupen invasion force arrived. Five hundred disciplined knights from various retinues, supported by one thousand levy forces, set up a massive, organized camp just a distance away from the imposing walls of the Ironhide Fortress.

The pieces were in position. The field was set.

You are reading A Dungeon Tycoon's Guide to Undead Capitalism Chapter 156: Dawn of a Capitalist Society on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.