Voadam
Legend
shilsen said:Hah! Eat my dust, Voadam![]()
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! *see previous post*
Draw!
Bang!
Voadam looks down at the bullet hole in his vest.
Damn he's quick.
Shilsen wins.
shilsen said:Hah! Eat my dust, Voadam![]()
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! *see previous post*
Fair enough, but now it seems like you've so diluted the descriptor I wonder why even bother to have it? If you can have two Lawful Good characters who don't share ANY personality traits, is the term Lawful Good really very useful?swrushing said:So one chaotic person might not believe or care all that much for politics at all, and be very chaotic in his personal habits... while another might not be chaotic in their personal habits but be very politically motivated.
And yet, we aggregate hand-eye coordination together with both manual dexterity and gross physical dexterity, all three of which could be represented by different stats for maximum realism. (Now that I review other posts, I see that people have made the same point with Charisma.)fusangite said:So why then would we use the same variable to contain them. Dexterity, Strength and Constitution are all components of a concept called "physical fitness" but this doesn't mean that it would be wise or helpful to aggregate the three scores into a single attribute.
We are of course, moving ever further into very subjective grounds.Elder-Basilisk said:The problem with this approach is that you end up with a lot of the exemplars of the various alignments actually being Neutral.
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Again, a character can BE X if he has some trasits of X and some traits of not-x. Its going to be rare that anyone has all-x or even all not-x but it really comes down to the weights of them.Elder-Basilisk said:And if the supposedly paradigmatic cases of the alignments are really neutral because they mix qualities that, in other examples are strongly associated with the other side of the spectrum, that is a good indication that there isn't really any kind of spectrum or continuum and that the category is misconceived to begin with.
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I do not think barbarians are chaotic IF you put them in a tribal situation witj lotsa tribal laws and traditions they strictly adhere to. What you are describing there are neutral or even lawful barbarians... which BTW i allow in my campaign since i felt the overly narrow characterization was notgood.Elder-Basilisk said:For instance:
Barbarians in their noble savage incarnation are often seen as a paradigmatic case for chaotic good or chaotic neutral.
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Elder-Basilisk said:Another example:
Superman is often
First off, from the SRD, ". Each alignment represents a broad range of personality types or personal philosophies, so two characters of the same alignment can still be quite different from each other. In addition, few people are completely consistent."barsoomcore said:Fair enough, but now it seems like you've so diluted the descriptor I wonder why even bother to have it? If you can have two Lawful Good characters who don't share ANY personality traits, is the term Lawful Good really very useful?
Then, on the other hand, there's Thomas Paine, a decent example of chaotic good. A career rebel, he pamphleteered and more for the Americans and French alike in support of their revolutions (and more places beside, I do believe), and, such as with the French, was unwilling to lend support to the new government when the revolutionaries took a turn most bloody. He seemed deeply unsatisfied with the political situation in most places and constantly criticized them in the hopes of creating something better. Like More, he was willing to stand his ground even under threat of death; he escaped Robespierre and the guillotine supposedly more by chance than anything else.
Of course it's useful, because alignment has game effects. A LG character is not affected by holy word or dictum, while characters of any other alignment are affected by one or both.barsoomcore said:Fair enough, but now it seems like you've so diluted the descriptor I wonder why even bother to have it? If you can have two Lawful Good characters who don't share ANY personality traits, is the term Lawful Good really very useful?
Patryn of Elvenshae said:Should I go on?
Well, I understand that. Sorry I wasn't clear. What I meant was is it a useful means of categorizing people? It seems not to be. It obviously has game impact and thus choosing one alignment or the other for your character can be useful (or harmful, as the case may be).AuraSeer said:Of course it's useful, because alignment has game effects.