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Pirate, Why Do You Plunder?
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<blockquote data-quote="Jfdlsjfd" data-source="post: 8190966" data-attributes="member: 42856"><p>This is totally unrealistic. This guy has left the theater already, when Leia resisted lawful arrest in the opening scene.</p><p></p><p>More on-topic, romanticized illegal behavior, either by having criminal backgrounds (charlatan, spy, criminal, possibly urchin if begging is outlawed) and classes (rogue...) in core classes, as been a default from corebooks. Besides drawing from novel sources, it's not surprising given the expected behaviour of PCs. They will often use killing as the default way of solving problem with sentient beings (because the logistic of taking prisonners is too boring, so let's conveniently kill...), plunder shamelessly (I have never seen PCs trying to identify the legitimate owners of the gold in the dragon's treasure). But many of the regular activities a PC engages in would result in them being considered criminals in the real world at various points in history. There is a cathartic value in solving your problem by killing the evil wizard when you don't kill your evil pointy-haired boss ; I don't see "pirates" being inherently more problematic than your regular, land-locked killers-for-hire called adventurers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jfdlsjfd, post: 8190966, member: 42856"] This is totally unrealistic. This guy has left the theater already, when Leia resisted lawful arrest in the opening scene. More on-topic, romanticized illegal behavior, either by having criminal backgrounds (charlatan, spy, criminal, possibly urchin if begging is outlawed) and classes (rogue...) in core classes, as been a default from corebooks. Besides drawing from novel sources, it's not surprising given the expected behaviour of PCs. They will often use killing as the default way of solving problem with sentient beings (because the logistic of taking prisonners is too boring, so let's conveniently kill...), plunder shamelessly (I have never seen PCs trying to identify the legitimate owners of the gold in the dragon's treasure). But many of the regular activities a PC engages in would result in them being considered criminals in the real world at various points in history. There is a cathartic value in solving your problem by killing the evil wizard when you don't kill your evil pointy-haired boss ; I don't see "pirates" being inherently more problematic than your regular, land-locked killers-for-hire called adventurers. [/QUOTE]
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