Don't own that book, so I went with the classic.enrious said:Sorry, but this concept strikes me completely as being a Favoured Soul, not a paladin.
Don't own that book, so I went with the classic.enrious said:Sorry, but this concept strikes me completely as being a Favoured Soul, not a paladin.
Everything. You're combining the paladin archtype with its polar opposite. What value does the term have at all once you've done this? 'Paladin' doesn't mean "any guy who has powers granted by a god." It's a very specific archtype. Making it all-inclusive destroys its meaning.Mallus said:Why couldn't a Paladin embody that? What would you lose?
D+1 said:But that's rather the point isn't it? Are all paladins by definition such shining paragons of virtue that they can't actually have character flaws? How can anyone ever play a paladin with an individual personality without those flaws? How can ANY paladin possibly even fall if he can't screw up occasionally because he's "human" and makes mistakes. Mistakes of the degree that would cause a paladin to lose his powers or actually fall can't actually be made if a paladin by definition is a shining paragon of virtue who DOESN'T make such mistakes.
It should be possible for a paladin, despite repeated errors in his ways and frequent Atonements, to never be considered as less a paladin than any other. It should be possible for a paladin to go through an entire campaign without once having the DM set an alignment trap for him. It should be possible for a paladin to have any character flaw that any other LG character can have - and that includes lying (within reason) and petty theft (which is what we're talking about, not grand larceny).
Not exactly. I think its a enormous stretch to say the character I defined is the polar opposite of a Paladin. He's not an atheist, a heretic (he's not challenging his church's doctrines, he just can't livle up to them initially), or a devotee of an Adversarial, evil-type diety)Lord Pendragon said:Everything. You're combining the paladin archtype with its polar opposite. What value does the term have at all once you've done this? 'Paladin' doesn't mean "any guy who has powers granted by a god." It's a very specific archtype. Making it all-inclusive destroys its meaning.
See, that's exactly the kind of thing I want to play through. In some ways, he's a lesson to others about the sin of Pride (ain't it odd that a little larceny and adultery disqualify one for Paladinhood, but Pride, which either cometh or goeth (I forget which) before the Fall is tacitly accepted, almost expected?)It occurs to me that your guy might find some interesting roleplaying opportunities when interacting with actual paladins. As others have noted, paladins aren't perfect. Aside from rage, one of the easiest flaws for them to exhibit is arrogance. And your guy, base as he is, but still touched by a god, will serve as a trial for those paladins who place too much stock in themselves and their favored status with their god. Of course, there will be those paladins, the best of the best, who can see the goodness beneath the base vices of your guy. But others will not.
Yes. Sort of. Well... this character can only exist in a moral framework where absolute goodness cannot be acheived without a god's help. So he's as good as any man alone, which to say he isn't, but he strives to accept grace.Voadam said:A couple questions,
Is he Lawful good?
Certainly. At first. His story is one of redemption, so he'll become more virtuous over time.Does his lying and cheating and so forth grossly violate the code which prohibits lying, cheating, and so forth?
Yes. He's got Evil in him, as do all men. He strives against it. Badly.Does he associate with evil?
The flesh is weak...Does he commit any evil acts?
I'm not arguing that this guy fits the description of a Paladin under the RAW. I'm asking if people think he's an interesting special case.If the answers are yes, no, no, and no, then you are fine to be a paladin and keep your powers under RAW.
Mallus said:Not exactly. I think its a enormous stretch to say the character I defined is the polar opposite of a Paladin. He's not an atheist, a heretic (he's not challenging his church's doctrines, he just can't livle up to them initially), or a devotee of an Adversarial, evil-type diety)
Right. This character would have to exist in a millieu that operated under a set different assumptions, ones closer to Medieval European Christianity...Voadam said:In 3e paladin and cleric powers do not necessarily come from a god. There can be godless paladins. It is goodness, not godliness that powers them. Goodness, not faith.
I may well tone done the level of his trangressions, primarily he'll be a drunken braggart, so he'll probably end up less evil than I've been describing him.In D&D under RAW a good god can't power an evil, neutral, or chaotic character as a paladin. So Gaulstaff can be a sinner but he still must be LG to qualify. For your grace model, if the sinner is not LG the god's grace must change him to lawful good before he can be a paladin.