Kurotowa said:Using an [Evil] spell is not by definition an evil act.
Kurotowa said:Using an [Evil] spell is not by definition an evil act. It is often an evil act because many [Evil] spells have vile purposes. But the [Evil] tag describes the spell's own nature, not the nature of its use. There is nothing innately evil about casting Deathwatch or Protection from Good. They can be used for evil, and heavy use of [Evil] spells should be grounds for considering an alignment shift, but it isn't automatically so.
Crothian said:Who's definition is this? Since when is evil not evil in D&D?![]()
Kurotowa said:Because evil the alignment action is not the same as [Evil] the spell descriptor. They're similar but not the same thing. [Evil] is a spell quality, evil is not.
Look at it this way. Magic Circle Against Evil has the [Good] descriptor. But an infernalist wizard will be casting it all the time as he summons and binds evil creatures. Can you really claim that the inferlanist is engaged in frequent good acts as part of this?
isoChron said:Maybe they meant use drug on other people, so they become dependend and willing to do what they normally would not.