Tzarevitch
First Post
RuminDange said:I'd have to say simply....OVER REACTION.
First off an arrow of dragon slaying, not even a greater arrow of dragon slaying is worthless unless you are hunting wyrmlings and even then it could be an easy save for them.
Second. NO WIN SITUATION. You placed the Paladin in a situation to deal with an known Evil dragon. Did you want him to fight it? If he fought the dragon and killed it, no information. If he deals with it in any fashion, gives it anything that could be useful to it, then he has dealt with evil and by most peoples (not all) interpretation he has violated his code of conduct to not deal with evil. Whether you give the dragon gold or a +1 longsword any of it can be used for evil purposes. Even giving the dragon a Holy weapon would do it even though the dragon or it’s minions would not be able to use it, the forces of good would be denied it.
I could see it now....
Paladin: "I pay the 1gp to bartender for the nights stay in the inn."
DM: "You're paladin hood has been stripped from you for dealing with evil. You have supplied gold to evil to be used for evil purposes"
Paladin:” WHAT!!!!!"
DM: "You can detect evil. You should have gone elsewhere to stay for the night."
Paladin: "The next closest inn is 3 days ride!!!"
Player of Paladin: "Screw this and **&$ you I'm outta here!!"
I’d have to agree any dragon would more than likely destroyed said arrow on principal then use it or give it a minion. How comfortable would a human really be if he an arrow of human slaying? Is he going to keep it around just in case or snap it and move on?
If you want the players to deal with evil to get information then you set the paladins up for failure. If you want them to kill every evil creature they come up to then you lose out of good story and role-playing possibilities.
I once did this type of thing, I learned from it. I had a Cavalier in 2E come up upon the world’s best known assassin in an alley; I meant it to be a role-playing situation and something the cavalier could learn information from. The assassin was well-known and hard to catch or kill and used very recognizable items that defined him. The cavalier recognized him and attacked. Even though the cavalier was like 5th level and the Assassin was around 18th. The cavalier was dead after a few shots from the assassin’s bow (his trademark item) and the player was furious. He couldn’t retreat and couldn’t by his code allow the assassin to get away while he was alive. My mistake cost me a good player and character in the campaign, all because we viewed the code differently. The player lost interest after that and toyed with few characters but finally left the group after causing a few problems elsewhere in the campaign.
Is killing evil because it is evil good or evil in itself?
If the evil guy is doing nothing, just has a bad attitude in life in general, and paladin kills him because he is evil, has the paladin committed a good act or an evil act?
Just my opinion of course. But paladins and any character with a code of conduct had best be well understood equally and by both player and DM or someone is going to over react.
RD
The issue had to do with whether or not the paladin broke his oath not whether or not he is making a deal with the devil (or evil dragon). The paladin may not have broken the letter of his oath but he most certainly broke the intent which was clearly explained to him when the arrow was given to him. Since a paladin is always lawful good both the wording AND the intent of the oath matter.
The issue is also not whether a longsword +1 or arrow of dragonslaying is a greater weapon in the hands of evil. The issue is another paladin asked him to give his oath not to do something and he did it anyway.
That being said I also would not strip him of paladinhood. All things considering, the infraction is rather minor. I would probably have a minion of the paladin's deity (or minion of good) appear and require a quest. Another possibility is to have the paladin that gave him the arrow return and express his displeasure at the character breaking his word. The most amusing option is if the dragon found out about the gift (perhaps he used legend lore or bardic knowledge or Gather Information) then launched a campain to inform others that the paladin can't be counted on to keep his word and drag his name through the mud.
The last option is to have the blue dragon actually employ the arrow (or sell it to another evildoer who uses it) to slay a good dragon. Perhaps this particular arrow is a minor artifact or perhaps the evildoers are collecting bushels of arrows of dragonslaying. Let the paladin see the consequences of failure to keep his word.
Tzarevitch