With that proof, you saving him will rile popular sentiment further, even though he has the good grace to walk out into the cold rather than stick around after being saved. If you do, then you have proof of Craven's intent to kill all of the workers - his written orders to the naval escorts of the flotilla. Saving Lord Craven from being lynched only gets to the best ending if you do not explore the Ocean Liner.
One thing regarding a specific choice you made, though. Other than that, you seem to have it right. Most likely, IMO, being so generous to both Lords and Workers means the Lords can let down their fear, and Workers can take joy in the community being so prosperous that it can afford such generosity - making them less inclined to settle old scores. That's a pre-requisite for the "We are Equal" ending speculation follows as to why. You need to give the starving Lord 10 Food Rations, then when the workers come demanding 'equality', give them 100 Food Rations. Did I screw up by denying the lord the extra rations? Is there some other little detail I missed? I've looked at some older threads but a lot of the responses seem to contradict each other.I also read that getting Prisons or Public Penance might help? I ended up getting the enslavement ending. succeeded in the final morale quest (stay in power, reduce discontent, raise hope). denied the one lord's request for extra food, but stopped the crowd from cutting off his hands used the Faith Keepers to resolve situations peacefully succeeded in the quests to provide shelter and improve food and medical infrastructure saved all other refugees in the Frostland "We Are Divided" end text)? This is what I did: So it's cool that this scenario has five separate endings, but are we aware of exactly what determines the difference between unification and enslavement ("We Are United" vs.