Pants said:The problem is... a lot of those names don't coincide well with the characters or places in the books by those definitions
Not that I'm complaining...
Except his moral barometer is completely wonky. He always does "what he thinks is right." (emphasis mine). But as far as I can tell, what he thinks is right is generally not consistent with standards of morality in either our culture or those of the books.Dragonblade said:And then there is Galad, my personal favorite character. He is just like his namesake, only not quite so innocent. But he is pure and good, albeit ruthless. One of the best literary portrayals of a paladinesque character I have ever read. And of course, I don't mean the watered down holy social worker the paladin class has devolved to in 3rd edition. I'm talking about the smite-the-infidel badass based on the Knights Templar that Gygax gave us in 1st Edition.![]()
Canis said:Except his moral barometer is completely wonky. He always does "what he thinks is right." (emphasis mine). But as far as I can tell, what he thinks is right is generally not consistent with standards of morality in either our culture or those of the books.
That makes for a pretty poor paladin, IMO.