
Welcome back!
As to your post: There's nothing in the lore that specifically states that a Seeker must collect women once they become a nunh. In theory, like in a lion pride, if a cataclysmic event kills all but one male and one female, then they are in essence a singular coupling. I know it's not the best of examples, but it's fair to determine that a nunh could choose his mate and eschew the desire to grow his family further for the time being or even intentionally. Going further into that, as he has fulfilled his tribal duty in mating as a nunh; the tribe can only grumble about it if for some odd reason, they don't like it.
However, according to Lore, (if you're a lore-strict sort of person) your male child could challenge for nunh and take over as the "breeding male" and choose to collect moar women (or men)
There's some confusion in the Seeker lore about mating and families. There is nothing that states that a nunh must have more than one wife, but it has alluded to the other nunh's determining their own social heirarchy by the size of their families and sometimes by the volume and strength of their womenfolk.
As to your post: There's nothing in the lore that specifically states that a Seeker must collect women once they become a nunh. In theory, like in a lion pride, if a cataclysmic event kills all but one male and one female, then they are in essence a singular coupling. I know it's not the best of examples, but it's fair to determine that a nunh could choose his mate and eschew the desire to grow his family further for the time being or even intentionally. Going further into that, as he has fulfilled his tribal duty in mating as a nunh; the tribe can only grumble about it if for some odd reason, they don't like it.
However, according to Lore, (if you're a lore-strict sort of person) your male child could challenge for nunh and take over as the "breeding male" and choose to collect moar women (or men)
There's some confusion in the Seeker lore about mating and families. There is nothing that states that a nunh must have more than one wife, but it has alluded to the other nunh's determining their own social heirarchy by the size of their families and sometimes by the volume and strength of their womenfolk.
What a colossal waste of time and energy.