Destil said:It's a problematic rule at best, IMHO. After all, a wizard clearly should need or at least benifit from dicipline, as would a cleric... so why don't these classes either require non-chaotic or at least give bonuses if your lawful? Illogical flavor, for me...
Not if that person does it just because it is convinient.RigaMortus said:If a "supposed" Chaotic person follows the law, would that not make them Lawful?
You don't switch from 0 to 100 in 1 second! But that course of action would indeed put you a step closer to losing your lawful alignment: the common good has nothing to do with law or chaos.And if a Lawful person has to bend the rules for the common good, would that not be a chaotic act and make that person Chaotic?
Not really. Characters are not set in stone (outsiders might behave that way, though). It's an outlook, a way of life. Chaotic characters tend to follow their whims, and don't care about the law, while a lawful person sticks to his code, be it a personal one or one thrust upon him, from order or kingdom...It is impossible for a person to ALWAYS be Lawful or ALWAYS be Chaotic. And isn't that what the alignment system is all about?
They either don't mind about law or chaos, or actually favor the balance.Then you have Neutral, which is NEITHER Lawful nor Chaotic. These people are just screwed, because no matter what action they take, it will either be orderly (lawful) or disorderly (chaotic). They might as well shoot themselves in the head :/
Yes, and that's the problem: It's not always extremes, in fact it's that only on rare occasions.Of course I am talking extremes here.
KaeYoss said:). It's an outlook, a way of life.
Yes, and that's the problem: It's not always extremes, in fact it's that only on rare occasions.