Mount&Blade/Factions

There are five factions in Mount&Blade. Each has a distinct visual style and rules a certain area of the map. Joining a faction is a central element of the game, but you can also choose to support a claimant's rebellion or become a masterless warlord.

Joining a faction
In order to join a faction you will need to build up at least 150 Renown; raising your relations with the king will allow you to join with a lower amount of Renown. Once you have built up this amount of Renown you will start getting offers from kings interested in having you as a vassal; refusing an offer lowers that king's reputation of you, and if it falls below 0 he will no longer offer vassalage. Once you have sworn an oath to a king you will no longer get offers from other rulers.

You can also enter the service of a king by becoming a Mercenary Captain and earning enough Renown to become a fully-fledge vassal.

Rewards and duties
Once you have sworn your oath to a king his enemies will become yours; your relations with factions at peace with your new faction will be set to 12, while your relations with those at war with your new faction will be set to -40. These values will be set regardless of what your relations with those factions was before entering the service of the king.

Once you have been sworn in you get to choose a banner, which will fly above your party and any towns and castles you own (if you chose the impoverished noble background during character creation you will already have a banner). You will also be granted a village fief, which will always be the poorest village the faction currently possesses. Fiefs generate weekly income, so visit regularly to collect your taxes. You can acquire additional fiefs by besieging enemy towns and castles (see siege for more).

As part of your service to the king the faction's marshal may give you a Kingdom Army quest, which it is in your best interest to complete. Once you have built up sufficient Renown and won the respect of your fellow vassals there is a chance that they will nominate you for the position of marshal.

Marshal
The marshal of a faction has full control over war. As the marshal you cannot give out Kingdom Army quests but you can order around the other vassals (and even the king). You can order vassals to follow you, defend a particular location, or start or stop a campaign (starting a campaign will make a large number of the kingdom's armies start following you). Under certain conditions a vassal may refuse your order, but most of the time you will be obeyed. Vassals following you will join you in battle (including sieges) unless they flee from overwhelming enemy odds or get distracted chasing after enemy parties.

Rebelling
Each kingdom has a pretender, a person who claims to be the rightful ruler. If you wish you can join a claimant's cause and fight against the current king. Playing as a rebel is completely different from playing as a regular vassal. For more information, see rebelling.

Masterless Warlord
Another option is to set up your own faction. To do this, simply anger a faction until their opinion of you is at -10, then start besieging their towns and castles. Once you have successfully captured a fief it will become grey and be listed as (Faction Name) Rebels based on the faction you took it from. An entry for this faction will also appear on the Factions page of the encyclopedia.

Being a masterless warlord is a difficult route; unlike rebelling under a claimant you cannot have any vassals under you, and most lords will have a poor opinion of your actions. You will still have the faction relations you had before you began your conquest, and your enemies will attempt to capture your fiefs at the first opportunity. You are still able to make peace with them through the normal methods, but you cannot make peace with factions you have taken fiefs from unless you first return the fiefs to them.

If you subsequently join a faction or support a claimant all your fiefs will convert to that faction, but you will retain ownership. Your faction will also disappear from the encyclopedia. Because you already hold some fiefs you will not receive a village upon joining a faction.