Value
I've been doing a good bit of item pricing lately, so I thought I'd post some musings on value. Namely: just what is a gold miza worth?
From the perspective of the player, it might seem like relatively little. A miza is the base unit of currency, so one might automatically conclude that's something like a dollar. And even if you do just a modicum of job threads, making living wage for your characters isn't difficult -- not that it should be! -- so 1 GM spent here or there generally doesn't affect much... kinda like spending a dollar here or there. Not to mention, the number involved is 1, and 1 is inherently perceived as being little; it's just one step up from 0. So it's easy to not think about
value... but that's all perspective and impressions, filtered through the experiences of one who doesn't live and work with the currency in question.
So what is a miza
actually worth?
Of course, there's no direct conversion of mizas into any RL currency, so let's look at the cost of staple foods. Consider the price of bread. I'm going to ignore modern cheap white breads, because those are more filler than food, and their mass production is only possible with industrialization. In my experience, a loaf of decent bread might cost something like $3.50 to $5. Let's call it $4 for mathematic convenience. Per the price list, a loaf of bread in Mizahar costs 2 CM -- all of 0.02 gm.
If 0.02 GM is $4, then 1 GM equates to something like $200.
By that measure, your character's 20x20 cottage (500 gm) is worth $100,000. The least of all horses in Mizahar (50 gm) costs an effective $10,000. That artist's toolkit (25 gm) is $5,000. That quarterstaff (1 gm) is a $200 stick of wood. That green cotton shirt (0.5 gm * 1.25 * 3) is valued at $37.50.
Looking at it that way paints the miza in very different light. Next time your character spends one, contemplate just how much value that little coin represents!
Footnote: For the interested, here's a couple resources on medieval and modern values IRL:
For What It's Worth -- A collection of prices from early England with rough conversions into modern (~late 90's) pounds sterling.
Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous: Living Costs of the Rich versus the Poor in England, 1209-1869 -- A scientific paper with a bunch of interesting graphs of relative worth, e.g. housing, spices, textiles, etc. relative to laborer wages. I recommend scrolling past the bibliography and perusing the many charts,
then read through the text if you're so inclined.