Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-26159109-20160117084520/@comment-25926288-20160117143442

Farerb wrote: Eskaver wrote: You mean most have a sigil thingy. Yeah, but some have differeing ones at times. The only full coat of arms we saw was Leopold's which has a couple crowned lions.

Yeah, each kingdom as I did math isn't really big if you consider that the castles are more likely to be central than at the edge of their kingdom. Regina legit drove about a day by carriage to George's castle from the Dark Palace. I know this because the context they gave. Rumple tells her the wedding is today and the lighting shows that it is morning and we know she arrives at the wedding in what is most definitely the afternoon. That is a reasonable amount for a carriage which puts it around 20 to 30 miles in between which may seem far, but that's simply city-state territory.

So, it's laziness that none of them have names. Like the Northern Kingdom, which we can figure out is North, but which one and have we seen it. Then there is Eric's which we incorrectly call the Maritime kingdom when they said " a maritime kingdom". We've got Glowerhaven (perhaps), Arendelle, the Southern Isles, Weselton, Camelot, Dunbroch, and Agrabah (which is a kingdom). Then we have the castle town of Arendelle and Hamelin as the only real towns with names, it bewilders me how they nknow where they are going. The woods have names, but are relevant to the kingdom, not necessarily to the EF region. And the region is called Misthaven.

That is all. We don't need noble houses, but kingdom names would be better because Camelot is a kingdom and David was kinghted as Prince (ugh) David of the Enchanted Forest....... The names you listed are not invented by them. They took them from the Disney movie or the actual story. I don't know, maybe I just nitpick because of GoT and how everything is mapped there and every kingdom and house has their own names and sigils and history. I mean, we don't even know how the monarchy works in EF. We know that women can inherit and Regina is probably the main Queen, while everyone else is perhaps titled as kings and queens, but they are more like lords. I know. I was emphasizing how original elements remain unnamed primarily. GOT had a book series and was filled with worldbuilding, different cultures and even three languages (one with a vairiety of dialects). Women seem to inherit and have decent rights, but then hilariously they proclaim how hard it is for woman in the EF when I don't really see how.

And lol at Arendelle not having Ingrid and her sisters being 30 years old when they were just getting married. I remember that 18-20 year old Regina being called an old maid.