Thanks for informing us! We'll look into that, and hopefully have it fixed for you soon.
1. Works that have more lasting value will be credited more highly, but the Kaittans would accept performances, including song and dance. Combative showmanship would be similarly valued; while the Kaittans are not especially military-inclined by nature, they have scouts and warriors among their people who would be interested to compare their combat styles against Juri's own.
2. Information or stories is also a valid form of payment—especially if a character is willing to transcribe their adventures or sit with a scribe to do so. Adventures or information about other worlds will generally have more value than personal narratives, though one might be able to purchase a meal with the latter.
While deception is certainly possible, trying to up-sell junk from Avagi would be unlikely to net much profit; the Kaittans are a clever people with a cultural focus on debate. More, they have little use for station tech as anything but a curiosity; some will be interested, but few are likely to trade much.
no subject
1. Works that have more lasting value will be credited more highly, but the Kaittans would accept performances, including song and dance. Combative showmanship would be similarly valued; while the Kaittans are not especially military-inclined by nature, they have scouts and warriors among their people who would be interested to compare their combat styles against Juri's own.
2. Information or stories is also a valid form of payment—especially if a character is willing to transcribe their adventures or sit with a scribe to do so. Adventures or information about other worlds will generally have more value than personal narratives, though one might be able to purchase a meal with the latter.
While deception is certainly possible, trying to up-sell junk from Avagi would be unlikely to net much profit; the Kaittans are a clever people with a cultural focus on debate. More, they have little use for station tech as anything but a curiosity; some will be interested, but few are likely to trade much.