How do you handle evil?

Well how do you handle it?

  • I'm okay with players choosing any alignment.

    Votes: 30 42.9%
  • I think players who choose an evil alignment are edgelords/wangrods.

    Votes: 11 15.7%
  • I don't understand how a player can make an evil character with in my campaign.

    Votes: 8 11.4%
  • Evil? I think evil is so fun I've made evil campaigns set in mostly evil worlds.

    Votes: 8 11.4%
  • I throw up my hands at alignment because the players are all murderhobos anyways.

    Votes: 6 8.6%
  • I just don't find evil all that fun.

    Votes: 38 54.3%


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This thread isn't in the D&D area so, broadly speaking at least, I don't think we're really talking about alignment. I think it's more about general behavior in game. I play a lot of Deadlands (Savage Worlds), which doesn't use alignment, but if a PC decided to just start murdering NPCs then it's going to be a problem.
That really hasn't been my experience. I've found that those players who are a problem with an evil-aligned PC play differently if the game just doesn't include alignment. It's almost as if there's something in them that needs to rebel, and if you remove the perceived authority of a stated alignment there's nothing to rebel against.

Of course, my experience isn't universal. :)

That said, the rest of my answer still applies: if the character is evil in a 'fun' way, there's no problem; if not, there is. I really don't care about PCs murdering NPCs, in and of itself - they're not real, so there's no actual harm done. I just adjudicate the consequences, and we go from there.
 

I have never once played in a game, or run a game, where the player of an Evil PC did not end up acting the total asshat. Even friends who would normally play a great Good or Neutral PC. So I never allow Evil PCs in any game I run, and I have sat out campaigns that included Evil PCs, as I am just not comfortable around that type of play.

But one thing I think people are overlooking in this discussion is the anti-hero. There may be a fine line, but there is a still a big difference between an anti-hero and an evil character, especially in the usual fantasy time period-equivalent setting.
 

But one thing I think people are overlooking in this discussion is the anti-hero. There may be a fine line, but there is a still a big difference between an anti-hero and an evil character, especially in the usual fantasy time period-equivalent setting.
Good point. Anti-hero is the way to go in a morally mixed group. Even then, they tend to have problems not playing together well, but at least they can work together.
 

also bad people produce good guys;
so if there were no bad people, how do good people climb in levels ( like Truth instead of Bluff )

so,
Evil ===> Technics
Good ==> Empathy
Lawful ==> Music/Spirit
Chaotic ==> Breath/Stun
( and Neutral was called Physics )
 

A lot of things certain people describe as evil, I consider fall under neutral. Evil is truly disturbing, and usually involves hurting the innocent. The Punisher isn't evil to me, he's a shade of neutral.

I really hate the "he's evil, but he doesn't do anything wrong" type characters. The "he's a great guy, but if you mess with him he's a bad dude". To me that would be used to describe neutral, or even good characters. Evil characters to me are EVIL- literally described as demonic and diabolic. Anything less doesn't deserve to be considered evil.
 

I use a flowchart..

1646060172169.png
 

What's is some fantasy fiction that you enjoy where the protagonist is evil?

Hm.

Villains by Necessity, by Eve Forward. Currently out of print, this is the story of a D&D party (with serial numbers filed off) in a world in which Good has won. And that's a problem. The main characters find that in order to save the world, they must be evil. The evil is thus mitigated by the fact that they don't actually want to to be evil.

Grunts, by Mary Gentle. This is Lord of the Rings, from the orcs' point of view, when the orcs find a cache of modern military hardware. The thing that makes the protagonists' villainy tolerable is that this is a comedy, and villainy in comedy works by different standards.
 

A lot of things certain people describe as evil, I consider fall under neutral. Evil is truly disturbing, and usually involves hurting the innocent. The Punisher isn't evil to me, he's a shade of neutral.

I mean, if you leave out where he's shot people for littering...

1646061744646.png
 


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