Levistus's_Leviathan
5e Freelancer
We have good Red Dragons in Eberron. We don't have good Aboleths in any setting that I'm aware of. (Also, metallic dragons should definitely be counted as people)Inflicting blasts of fire breath on people while looking like a Boeing 747 with teeth and painted red typically doesn't make you a person either.
In D&D terms, Alien equals aberrations.One could easily argue that the term 'alien' can apply to any fantasy creature type - unicorns, elves, dwarves, dragons, aboleths, orcs, etc. - and thus I'm not sure how useful a descriptor it is here.
I mainly ignored that fact in the post. Wasn't essential to getting my point across.Did they take out the bit where if you kill a Fiend (or Demon, or Devil) on its home plane it's permanently dead, then?
I'd argue, that Chaotic Good Chain Devil in BG: DiA counts more as a person than a serial killer or lich.Again, depends on context. For population census purposes they're people (or persons, same diff). For objective definition purposes they're people (or persons) as are all Humans. But subjective definitions on an individual and-or societal basis could easily conclude they're not people.