takyris said:
By the definition of CE some people are using, any CE creature would be utterly out of luck if placed in a room with treasure and one door leading out, because the TRULY chaotic and evil thing to do would be to fireball the treasure and then run repeatedly into the walls trying to break them because you're too chaotic to use the door.
I agree that it looks this way, but that's not what I'm suggesting (and I don't if anyone else on this board is suggesting this either).
A Chaotic evil person in a room full of treasure would take it and probably use it immediately or as soon as possible to make him/her stronger and will kill anyone trying to tax him. A NE person would probably consider what benefit the money will grant based upon it's goal to make himself happy... be that spend it immediately, or use it for some other purpose down the line. A LE person would probably try to find a way to keep and save the money without the authorities knowing and taxing him, invest it, and then use the dividends to pay someone to kill an enemy.
This does not imply stupidity, but differences in ethical perception. Fireballing the treasure would be plain stupid and of no value to the CE person. It would not empower him or make him stronger.
takyris said:
I think that most gamers make Lawful Evil societies that behave in a Chaotic Evil fashion, and then are out of luck on what to do in Chaotic Evil socieites. In a Lawful Evil society, assassination "just because" should not be the norm. The society is harsh, rigid, and moving through the ranks requires utter loyalty and ruthlessness. A Lawful Evil person who tried to get ahead by killing anyone who got in his way would be killed quickly for disturbing the status quo. Assassination of superiors would only go unpunished if it had the tacit approval of higher-ranking superiors. Law would rule, and would be ruthlessly wielded to gain advantage. People who talk about Lawful Evil societies with rampant assassinations and murders in the streets are missing the Lawful aspect of it. Lawful Evil societies hate civil war, because it's so messy, and it makes tax collection more difficult, so they only go there if it's absolutely the perfect time, and they've got all the backing they need.
I agree with much of this. An assassination in a LE environment is probably business-based and politically, rather than personally, motivated. It's also sanctioned by the powers that be within a law's framework.
takyris said:
A demon lord could grab a balor and say, "My rule is absolute within my reach, and meaningless outside my reach. I understand that. Right now, however, my reach includes you. Serve me well and faithfully, and you shall occupy my throne when I go on to kill Demogorgon. And should Demogorgon attempt to pry you away with promises of power, remember that giving in to his wishes would mark you as ambitious enough to cross a greater power -- and such a trait would brand you as dangerous in Demogorgon's eyes, fit only to be used and dispatched quickly." If I were that balor, chaotic and evil and all that, I would serve the guy who just told me all that well and faithfully -- after all, I'm getting something out of it, I'm learning enough to potentially have cards to play against my current master someday in the future, and I'm riding the coat-tails of power. It's a good deal for me.
Very eloquent and very well said.
However, in the end, the Balor is thinking about doing what it can to overthrow his master. He's not loyal, isn't thinking about honor or the opportunity offered, and is chafing under the Demon Prince. In LE societies, there is loyalty and not everyone is interested in individual power, but in using the law to protect one's interests. That Balor will eventually seek to have its own personal power and independence at the expense of the support and structure it has with the Demon Prince.
takyris said:
The idea that demons only respect brute force is silly. If that were true, succubi would be extinct. Yes, eventually, a CE society will be fully replaced as people rise to the top, get killed or supplanted, and end up as larvae again. But that doesn't mean it's going to happen quickly by human standards. Anyone who rises to power is going to be the cream of the crop, the wisest, smartest, most charismatic force of evil that the multiverse has yet seen. They'll be in charge for awhile, with toadies helping them out, serving faithfully (because no one can make them a better offer that they trust) and they'll use diplomacy, deals (which they'll honor unless it REALLY helps them to break), traps, tricks, and everything they can to keep themselves in power.
Weaker individuals in a CE environment won't go extinct so long as they find a useful niche. In
Escape from New York (a movie I don't really care for), there are weak people in this CE city that are alive. They exist because they have their uses for the time being. Stepping out of line mean instant reprisals.
takyris said:
The difference between Chaos and Law isn't that Chaos can't have an organized structure. It's that the chaotic organized structure is built on pragmatism and not ideals of honor, law, or correct behavior.
-Tacky
I will concede this point (although I think it's inferred in my Lion analogy in which pragmatism requires that a defeated male lion will usually flee and allow its young to die when overthrown by rivals).
Very well done, Tacky.