Serjo wrote: ↑
October 10th, 2024, 10:59
none of this contradicts what I said, and your own source specifically mentions the point I made. A rogue trader's power is directly tied to his fleet, not his warrant.
In the game as well as one of the books (dont remember its name) one of the recurring themes of being a rogue trader is politicking with the navigator houses and explorators, because you can't actually force them to do anything, and they only have to provide you with the bare necessities. In the TTRPG it states that most RTs seldom own anything bigger than a light cruiser, and that frigates and freighters are the norm. This is nothing in comparison to Space marine chapters, Imperial and Navy Commanders, etc. RTs only pay tithes if they control worlds to tithe from afaik, which many do not. And no, I am not thinking of the Charterists whatsoever, the key difference between the Charterists is that RTs can go wherever they want so much as they have the means, Charterists cannot and are bound to defined contracts and routes.
A "lesser rogue trader" has as much
power as a "weak imperial governor". The weakest, bottom-rung rogue trader is as powerful as an impoverished noble.
What is a "lesser rogue trader"? The book gives an example of a rogue trader with 40 profit factor: "The Rogue Trader dynasty is a fresh, new player on the galactic stage"
Serjo wrote: ↑
October 10th, 2024, 10:59
TTRPG it states that most RTs seldom own anything bigger than a light cruiser, and that frigates and freighters are the norm
You have a 9/10 chance of having at least a frigate, and a 1/10 chance of starting with a
grand cruiser. The hypothetical "lesser rogue trader" would be a couple ship points short of a light cruiser. Table 1-5 core rulebook, and Battlefleet Koronus book.
And in the CRPG, you're politicking with house Winterscale, one of the most powerful rogue trader dynasties that exists — they're featured prominently in the TTRPG. Von Valancius is also immensely powerful and wealthy, but this is not conveyed well
at all thru gameplay mechanics, imo. There's a reason that the only person who gets
close to barking an order at you is
the lord inquisitor, and he still doesn't even directly give you an order but a hint he might make things worse for you if you don't comply. Because you're his peer.
The argument can be reduced to: "Are rogue traders peers of chapter masters and inquisitors?" The answer is obviously,
yes, the books flat out say this:

This is a feudal society. Trying to rank peers against one another is foolish, as that depends on the individual. And that's when in imperial space, the rogue trader can tell them to go jump out an airlock when outside of it.
But hey, if people want to go around sticking their thumb in the eye of random rogue traders until they find a Lord Captain with a fleet rivaling a spess murine chapter capable of ordering an orbital strike on their planet just for fun, go ahead. **** around and find out, I suppose.