Wizard: I’m not keeping cash, I’m buying paper and ink and scrolls with it.
Being a wizard is super expensive.
As your income increases you increase your defenses. Guards, armored caravans, a bank to store your gold, a connection to the local ruler so guards respond quickly, etc.
Besides, a wizard is probably spending most of their profits and books and other spell supplies. They gotta fund that Wizard’s Tower of Compensation some how.
Overcompensation, you mean. /picklerick.gif
In a world where gold can be fabricated with magic, I imagine it would work like IRL diamonds. Synthetic diamonds are relatively cheap to make and just as (or even more) beautiful, but the only ones that have ‘value’ are the ones extracted destructively and with awful human conditions.
So you could make the caveat that because his gold is not ‘genuine’, it doesn’t have market value.
He’s not making gold, he’s making useful things he sells for gold. Fabricate turns an equivalent value of raw material into a crafted object, so to make 50 lbs of gold bars you’d need 50lbs of gold, but to make a piece of furniture you’d just need part of a tree and 10 minutes.
Just as a note, there’s actually too much gold that exists in the Forgotten Realms. IRL humans have only mined 187,000 metric tons of gold, and 2/3 of that was mined since 1950. Without getting into the nitty gritty too much, let’s just say there’s not nearly enough gold for every monster to have even a small collection of coins, much less every adult dragon falling asleep on a golden pile while everyone else works just fine on a gold standard or something like it.
Is it the dwarven kingdoms out mining humanity? Is gold simply more common or perhaps available in easier, more concentrated ores?
Or are wizards adding more gold from thin air, and dragons provide a natural deflationary pressure by being obsessed with making great hoards of coins?
So you’re saying the wizards and dragons are coordinating their efforts in an attempt to keep scarcity artificially high?
I KNEW IT
Relax, they’re just implementing rational monetary policy to keep the economy healthy.
Of course their version of inflation reduction involves dragons burning down a significant part of the land, but it works. Nobody is complaining about the price of groceries anyway.
Well, they are, but the town guards beat them if they try to protest.
This is why I loved the old Stronghold Builders Guide. Give your players a base, something to care about AND something to adventure for. “Give up? And only have 7 bedrooms? I think not!”
Here’s hoping Palworld spawns a BG3 spoof with a live market and politics…