Trade and Currency
How trade works across the Beyond, where seeds serve as currency and barter is a way of life among interconnected communities.
Trade is a way of life in the Beyond. Across gaseous clouds and between worlds, communities exchange goods, stories, and services as a matter of survival and connection. Capitalism as a system does not take hold here. The many small, interconnected communities that make up the Beyond function through relationships, reciprocity, and shared need rather than accumulation of wealth. Hoarding is seen as foolish at best and harmful at worst, and most cultures teach that what you have beyond what you need belongs to those around you.
Barter
Most day-to-day exchange in the Beyond happens through barter. A fisher trades their catch for bread. A weaver exchanges cloth for pottery. A healer offers care in return for firewood or a place to sleep. These exchanges are rarely precise or transactional. They are built on trust, and over time the balance tends to work itself out. In tight-knit communities, keeping a running tally would be considered rude. You give what you can and take what you need.
Seeds as Currency
When barter is impractical, particularly during large trade meets, travel between unfamiliar communities, or dealings with Beyonders from distant worlds, seeds serve as the universal currency of the Beyond. Life is the most valuable thing in the Beyond, and seeds represent exactly that: the potential for new growth, food, shelter, and medicine. A seed is not an abstraction of value. It is value.
Seeds come in three denominations based on rarity and the life they represent. All three are widely recognized and accepted across the Beyond, though some remote communities may still prefer direct barter.
Seed Denominations
| Denomination | Description | Exchange Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Common Seed (cs) | Seeds from abundant, fast-growing plants. Easy to find, easy to grow. Used for small everyday purchases. | 1 cs |
| Heritage Seed (hs) | Seeds from established, slower-growing plants passed down through families or communities. Harder to come by and more valuable for what they produce. | 1 hs = 10 cs |
| Ancient Seed (as) | Exceedingly rare seeds from old-growth plants, unique specimens, or species thought to be lost. Carrying an Ancient Seed is carrying a piece of living history. | 1 as = 10 hs = 100 cs |
Pricing and Value
The value of goods and services in the Beyond is measured in seeds. A simple meal at a trade meet might cost a few Common Seeds. A finely crafted tool or a season's worth of dried herbs might be worth several Heritage Seeds. Truly exceptional items, rare mushroom specimens, ancient artifacts, or a master-crafted vessel, are priced in Ancient Seeds.
Example Prices
| Item | Barter Value | Seed Price |
|---|---|---|
| Simple meal | 2 cs | |
| Night's lodging | 5 cs | |
| Common tea blend (pouch) | 1 hs | |
| Handwoven blanket | 4 hs | |
| Sturdy rope (50 ft.) | 1 hs | |
| Artisan pottery | 2–5 hs | |
| Healing salve | 3 hs | |
| Quality hand tool | 5 hs | |
| Heritage tea blend (specialty) | 1 as | |
| Mushroom engineering consultation | 2 as | |
| Master-crafted vessel | 10+ as | |
| Ancient mushroom specimen | 5+ as |
Seed Authenticity
Because seeds are living things, counterfeiting is difficult but not impossible. Dead seeds, painted stones, or seeds from low-value plants disguised as Heritage or Ancient specimens do appear in trade from time to time. Most experienced traders can identify a seed by sight, smell, or texture, and some communities employ dedicated seed-keepers who verify authenticity during large trade events. Passing a false seed is considered a serious offense in most cultures, on par with theft or fraud.
Wealth and Status
In the Beyond, wealth is not measured by how many seeds you carry but by the quality of your relationships and the health of the land you tend. A creature with a pouch full of Ancient Seeds but no community to return to is considered far poorer than one who has nothing but is welcomed everywhere. That said, seeds are practical, and those who travel frequently or trade across great distances may carry a modest supply for convenience. Large stores of seeds are typically held communally by villages or trade guilds, not by individuals.