jdrakeh
Front Range Warlock
Dragonbait said:zowie.. Well, that guys was clearly not right in the head rather than roleplaying incorrectly.
I choose for C: Completely Nuts and Roleplaying Wrongly

Dragonbait said:zowie.. Well, that guys was clearly not right in the head rather than roleplaying incorrectly.
Herzog said:Playing a Lawfull Good Paladin (just taking the extreme) and ignoring every aspect of allignment, killing and stealing just as you see fit, still isn't roleplaying 'wrong'.
It is, however, in violation of some game rules. It's up to the DM to enforce the rules in this situation, and change the alignment of the character in question to it's actual alignment.
Playing your character in a way that makes the game less fun for you, and/or others, isn't roleplaying 'wrong' either. It's just not much fun.
I have several years of experience with large LARP events, and if there's one thing that tends to occur more in LARP than any other RPG, it's roleplay.
You say that as if it's a bad thing. Debates around here would be a lot less heated if there was more in-pants getting going on.Celebrim said:Well, except those that think its an elaborate ploy to get in each others pants.
Technik4 said:But how you feel the character should be played is paramount, not the current alignment.
Except that in this case the player is Shakespeare in the process of writing Hamlet, not the actor.werk said:If your direction says Hamlet exits stage left, and you exit stage right, you are not playing the role of Hamlet correctly.
I understand where you're going with this, I think. But I have two points to make in response:Technik4 said:But how you feel the character should be played is paramount, not the current alignment. In real life people don't question how they generally do things before acting, they act in a manner they wish to. Concepts like honor, duty, loyalty, integrity, etc may make a person do things against their nature, grudgingly. But no one consciously thinks "Well, I consider myself a lawful good person and therefore I should act in this manner". Similarly, no one thinks "Well I'm an engineer, so in this given situation I should act like an engineer." People act the way they've acted their whole lives, and my point is even "lawful" people have bouts of inconsistency.
sniffles said:I understand where you're going with this, I think. But I have two points to make in response:
1) A roleplaying game isn't real life, and the player is not his character. Alignment helps to define a character's personality and should help to determine how you feel the character should be played. It isn't a box they can't step outside of, but it is a constraint of the rules that should be applied consistently if it's being applied at all.
2) In real life people don't question how they generally do things before acting, true. But when they act in the manner they wish to, it's based on their personal code of morals, ethics and values. They may not think about it consciously, but it colors their choices. Most of the time when people are inconsistent in their behavior it's due to extenuating circumstances - illness, fear, tiredness, presence of intoxicant or depressant substances, or extreme duress.
It's an 'I do what I want cuz I'm the player!' argument. I see it as the alignment IS the way the character should be played, rather than the players whim...but the player creates or chooses the character, so it really shouldn't be a problem.