Ranks & Titles
Nobles, royalty, knights, military ranks, and guild grades
Rank
Culture
Era
Mood

Crown Prince
Supreme皇太子 · Crown Prince — The Sole Heir to the Empire
The emperor's official heir. Holding the second-highest authority in the entire empire, the crown prince must be ready to assume governance at a moment's notice should the emperor be incapacitated. From childhood, he is trained in statecraft, military strategy, diplomacy, and — depending on the fantasy setting — magic. The tension between the crown prince's supporters and his opponents is the eternal theme of imperial politics.

Princess
Supreme公主 · Princess — The King's Daughter, the Most Precious Bargaining Chip
The daughter of a king or emperor. A status conferred by bloodline rather than a hereditary title; her succession rights are often more restricted than a prince's. Yet in fantasy, the princess has been overwhelmingly reinterpreted not as a passive rescue target but as an active figure who takes up the sword, wields magic, or orchestrates political schemes herself. A princess's marriage sealed alliances between kingdoms — making the princess herself a 'living political asset.'

Queen Regnant
Supreme女王 · Queen Regnant — A Female Monarch Who Ascended the Throne in Her Own Right
An independent female monarch who ascended the throne in her own right — not as a consort. Distinguished from the Queen Consort, she is called the Queen Regnant. Historical exemplars include Cleopatra, Elizabeth I, and Queen Victoria. In fantasy, the queen regnant is often portrayed as a supreme character who combines magical ability with exceptional strategic genius — the absolute ruler of the kingdom and the apex of all the nobility.

Queen Consort
Supreme王妃 · Queen Consort — The King's Lawful Wife, Mother of the Kingdom
The king's lawful wife. Though ranking below an empress, she holds the official position second only to the king within the kingdom. The queen consort is far more than a spouse — she co-presides over royal ceremonies, bears responsibility for the crown prince's education, and administers the consort hierarchy, exercising genuine domestic power. When the king is absent due to war or travel, she may serve as regent with full royal authority. In fantasy, the queen consort is variously interpreted as a beloved mother, a ruthless politician, or a sinister power broker who deals in poison.