Doug McCrae
Legend
I'm considering playing up the conflict between Law and Chaos in a Three Hearts and Three Lions, Keep on the Borderlands, OD&D, red box D&D stylee. Will my (British) players just think I'm ripping off Warhammer?
I'm not British nor familiar with Warhammer, so can't help with the last bit.I'm considering playing up the conflict between Law and Chaos in a Three Hearts and Three Lions, Keep on the Borderlands, OD&D, red box D&D stylee. Will my (British) players just think I'm ripping off Warhammer?
Possibly, as I have no foreknowledge of what your players will think, but Law-Chaos was a dynamic long before Warhammer. There are a number of other systems and settings that draw upon Law-Chaos as well. For example in Tékumel, the gods are divided between the Gods of Stability and the Gods of Change, thinly veiled Law-Chaos themes. So it is really a question of how you approach the conflict between Law and Chaos.I'm considering playing up the conflict between Law and Chaos in a Three Hearts and Three Lions, Keep on the Borderlands, OD&D, red box D&D stylee. Will my (British) players just think I'm ripping off Warhammer?
Same answer, though: 13A icons should be ideal, or at least pretty workable, for the purpose. Either as just Law & Chaos, pick a side, or with several representatives of each.OD&D, Red Box and Keep on the Borderlands Law versus Chaos is essentially Good versus Evil. Anderson is similar with (I think, long time since I read it) a connection of magic with Chaos and science with Law.