Krypter said:
Shemmie, dear, no offence but your namesake prances around town shopping for dresses and preens herself in a mirror.
Man, the temptation for a purely IC response... but no.
The best way to respond here is to relate to a quote from the Evil Fashion thread we had last week, about how really, if you were an evil warrior and you could get away with it and just kill anyone who said anything about it, you'd be wearing black full plate armor with spikes and skulls on it too.
The Marauder acts that way because frankly, she can get away with it. Plus, given her position in Sigil, it's nearly a job requirement to take upon some more mortal traits in order to better interact. It's better to act the part of the prissy socialite with fangs in an evening gown than a snarling fiend from the Gray Waste of indeterminate gender who leaves a trail of ashes behind themselves. One of those people can relate to, even if they understand that you're wholly evil. The act people can relate to, and business in corruption and souls goes much better because of it.
Same thing with A'kin, the 'good cop' to her 'bad cop' in Sigil. He's nice. Far too nice. But he gets information that way even if he probably goes back to Gehenna every night to torture petitioners to release the fury of having to bottle his true nature day in and day out.
The same fiends in their own environment wouldn't carry around that baggage and pretense. But perhaps that's just my take on it, a bit of rationalizing the situation. I've used at least one of them like that, and made them pretty damn fiendish in the stuff I've written.
PS: Yeah! Bring back Anthraxus! Who is this Mydichlorian Star Wars refugee anyway?

PPS: And the Molydeus. My players decided to jump into a portal to the Plane of Fire rather than fight one. Now that's scary.
Honestly I like the faceless Mydianchlarus at Khin-Oin, fits better with the race to an extent, given Anthraxus' origin. Course I killed off Anthraxus in my own campaign, and Mydianchlarus too.
And the Molydeus was awesome. My PCs sadly trusted one of them.
"You can't attack us! You said you were bound to obey us if we let you out!" - sadly mistaken PC
The Klurichnir in 3e was a pretty thin attempt to replace the Molydeus, but it'd be fraggin awesome if we got the Molydei back.