Turn 17Ship of Freaks's Cyan HumansStocks: 71 Food
Structures: 4 Towns, 7 Farms, 21 Nature Preserves, 5 Fisheries
Population: 40 Population
Technologies: Field Agriculture, Preservation, Fish Domestication
Grek's Red KoboldsStocks: 1 Food
Structures: 1 Kobold Cave, 5 Fisheries, 2 Human Populations
Population: 10
Technologies: Theft, Fish Domestication, Stealth Maneuvering, 9/10 Master Theft
Immortal's Green DwarvesStocks: 2 Food
Structures: 3 Subterranean Farms, 1 Mountainhall
Population: 4
Technologies: Mining, Subterranean Farming
Terenos's Purple HalflingsStocks:45 Food
Structures: 6 Farms, 3 Shires
Population: 18
Technologies: Field Agriculture, Fish Domestication, Woodcutting
Terra's Pink ElvesStocks: 22 Food
Structures: 2 Villages, 1 Fishery, 20 Nature Preserves
Population: 18
Technologies: Preservation, Fish Domestication, Field Agriculture
Why are the Elves in a constant state of derp (that was rhetorical; I know its because of my GMing incompetence, extreme laziness, and small attention span)? I tried my best to make the desert-dwelling Elf situation work by moving them to the forests at the northeast. It uses the same number of tiles and actions, so it should make sense for the previous turn.
Megabeast HordesGolden Dragon: The Crown of Unconditional Loyalty, 1 Dwarf Population, 1 Halfling Population, 11 Food
The Kraken: The Seaman's Pearl
The Roc: 3 Roc Eggs
Goings onThe Dragon continues his rampage against the Humans, burning their homes, eating those that rebel, and carrying all that submit back to his lair. Even his keen draconic eyes did not detect the shadowy figures lurking in the darkness of the ruined Dwarf fortress. The Dragon threw his new human livestock into a large rusty cage, which had once been used by the mountainhall's Dwarves. After he curled up like a house cat beside his food pile atop a mountain of treasure, the Kobolds set to work. Luckily, the cage the new arrivals were imprisoned in was much further away from the Dragon than the cages of his other captured people, and the Kobolds were able to "rescue" them (the Humans were silently beaten unconscious and tied up in sacks, then violently dragged outside and down the mountain). Once back at the Kobold camp, the crowd of Humans was displayed to the Kobold chief, who observed and judged them like an owl. After examining all of the Humans (who were now bound in Kobold-made reed ropes), the chief decided against eating any of them as the Humans would prove useful as accomplices for future heists. After processing their Human plunder, the Kobolds' celebratory feast was cut short by panting Hobbit peasants, led by Terenos. They explained to Grek that their people had been captured and their homes on the western frontier had been destroyed. Grek rose from his throne of bones and drew his sharpest obsidian knife, after tossing aside his ceremonial wreath and dawning his deerskin hood. Without saying a word to the Halflings, the Grek and his two stealthiest thieves disappeared into the forest. They returned only a few hours later at dawn, herding the scarred and battered Hobbits into the light of the Kobold campfire (the Hobbits were ironically treated much more humanely than the Humans). Chief GruGru Rak sat on his throne with a huge grin on his face, both from pride in helping his short comrades and from the thrill of his first heist in a very long time. The rescued Halflings were set free (they were invited to stay for a feast of dolphin offal, but they politely declined).
Also the food from the Shire that was stolen by the Dragons, and then by the Kobolds, currently resides in the Kobold Stocks.