Bolares
Legend
No, I want more. I want it on spells, I want it on classes, I want it on races, I want it on planes.

No, I want more. I want it on spells, I want it on classes, I want it on races, I want it on planes.
And that would probably make me stop playing D&D. I barely tolerate Alignment as it is, and absolutely hate the nonsensical and redundant Great Wheel Cosmology. If D&D had a flood of more alignment in the game, with restrictions on classes/subclasses, spells, and races, I would leave the hobby.No, I want more. I want it on spells, I want it on classes, I want it on races, I want it on planes.
I certainly dont want LESS.![]()
Why you gotta yuk my yum dude?And that would probably make me stop playing D&D. I barely tolerate Alignment as it is, and absolutely hate the nonsensical and redundant Great Wheel Cosmology. If D&D had a flood of more alignmnet in the game, with restrictions on classes/subclasses, spells, and races, I would leave the hobby.
This may come as a surprise, but I actually agree with you on that. At least, if it’s going to exist at all. If alignment has no mechanical consequences, it’s just a pointless descriptive tag that causes arguments on the interest and nothing else. Get rid of it, it’s not doing anything useful. Or, make it do something useful. I’d be fine with either solution, but 5e’s current approach of trying to have alignment exist but not matter in any way is the worst of both worlds.No, I want more. I want it on spells, I want it on classes, I want it on races, I want it on planes.
I certainly dont want LESS.![]()
What can I say? I was responding to a post that said "most people" had a problem with alignment. That would indicate a plurality of people have a problem with alignment. Since I've played with literally hundreds of people over the years (dozens in home games and extensive public play as player and DM) if it were as big an issue as some people claim it would be incredible that I've never heard of it nor seen it be a major issue.I'm not. That's why I cited all of the articles over the years that dealt with the issue. Regardless of your experience never seeing it, or my experience having seen it, certainly you can agree that if it's a repeated topic in articles of the years in how to deal with, then certainly it exists, right?
I also don't think it's a stretch to say that if rule is defined as X, then most people will treat it like X. Or are you arguing that most people do not read a rule and default to assuming that's how said rule should be incorporated? Because I'd find that hard to believe.
I have a content advisory on the cover, as well as an indicator on every relevant monster entry. That is not remotely the same has having one disclaimer hidden somewhere in the beginning that many won't see, especially if they are using digital content (I keep brining that up but you seem to keep ignoring it.)When your book comes out, with a disclaimer/warning, as we have discussed, and if you get blasted by X number of people for being insensitive, or triggering, or whatever.
Who's fault will that be?
Not the same thing. You can add those things with less than a snap of your finger as a DM. If you want to make Oathbreaker Paladins all have to be Evil, Devotion Paladins all have to be Lawful Good, Orcs all to be evil, etc, you are free to do that with your DM hat on. It takes more work and justification as a DM to remove that than add on minor restrictions like "no, your Lawful Good Devotion Paladin cannot burn down the Oprhanage and still call themselves good". Having to go through all of the books and remove every instance of alignment-restrictions (which would probably heavily influence class spell lists and racial abilities) to make it what I wanted is more work than just saying "no, Orcs have to be evil in this world".Why you gotta yuk my yum dude?
Probably fair. In the last 6 or so months I've quickly pivotted away from 5e's approach to pretty much everything, maybe it was LevelUp that had me thinking about things differently, maybe it was looking again at PF1 and remembering how things could (should?) be, I dont know.This may come as a surprise, but I actually agree with you on that. At least, if it’s going to exist at all. If alignment has no mechanical consequences, it’s just a pointless descriptive tag that causes arguments on the interest and nothing else. Get rid of it, it’s not doing anything useful. Or, make it do something useful. I’d be fine with either solution, but 5e’s current approach of trying to have alignment exist but not matter in any way is the worst of both worlds.
You can continue to repeat this, and I'll continue to disagree, until we both keel over from our advancing age.If you read the flavor text, there is no need for alignment in the stat block at all.