MerakSpielman
First Post
You don't have to tell the PC that his character is CE. Just treat him rules-wise like he is. Have him inexplicably be unable to enter a (properly Hallowed) good temple. Have paladins detect him. Stuff like that.
threshel said:From personal experience, this is a potential Pandora's Box. I had some players who resisted alignments; they wanted to play self-interested characters with no accounatbility. They used the "CN equals crazy/unnacountable" to create characters they thought were outside the alignment system. In other words, they could do anything, and their CN alignment would prevent any alignment shifts.
Well I'm not anymore (this was years ago), but its because I'm always the DM for my main group, and they won't let me play--ever. They absolutely refuse to DM, and so that has left me with some pretty awful experiences as a player. In all my years of playing D&D, I have never found a group in which I could be a player, rather than a DM, except for a few that I played for a tad but had serious problems (like that one). Its really a sad fate, but my players all insist that I'm too much of a better DM than they are for them to DM...its flattering, but I try to tell them they won't improve unless they try (I think they're just lasy).Yair said:Actually, I'm wondering why you are playing with the players![]()
Percivellian said:Murdering children,
I tend to agree. It might be fun to every once in a while have players vote on each other's alignment by secret ballot.Aust Diamondew said:In my game I dictate the PC's alignment based on their actions and their input. Actions should dictate alignment not the other way around.