D&D 5E WotC's Jeremy Crawford Talks D&D Alignment Changes

Jeremy Crawford has spoken about changes to the way alignment will be referred to in future D&D books. It starts with a reminder that no rule in D&D dictates your alignment. Data from D&D Beyond in June 2019 (Note that in the transcript below, the questions in quotes were his own words but presumably refer to questions he's seen asked previously). Friendly reminder: no rule in D&D mandates...

Jeremy Crawford has spoken about changes to the way alignment will be referred to in future D&D books. It starts with a reminder that no rule in D&D dictates your alignment.

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Data from D&D Beyond in June 2019

(Note that in the transcript below, the questions in quotes were his own words but presumably refer to questions he's seen asked previously).

Friendly reminder: no rule in D&D mandates your character's alignment, and no class is restricted to certain alignments. You determine your character's moral compass. I see discussions that refer to such rules, yet they don't exist in 5th edition D&D.

Your character's alignment in D&D doesn't prescribe their behavior. Alignment describes inclinations. It's a roleplaying tool, like flaws, bonds, and ideals. If any of those tools don't serve your group's bliss, don't use them. The game's system doesn't rely on those tools.

D&D has general rules and exceptions to those rules. For example, you choose whatever alignment you want for your character at creation (general rule). There are a few magic items and other transformative effects that might affect a character's alignment (exceptions).

Want a benevolent green dragon in your D&D campaign or a sweet werewolf candlemaker? Do it. The rule in the Monster Manual is that the DM determines a monster's alignment. The DM plays that monster. The DM decides who that monster is in play.

Regarding a D&D monster's alignment, here's the general rule from the Monster Manual: "The alignment specified in a monster's stat block is the default. Feel free to depart from it and change a monster's alignment to suit the needs of your campaign."

"What about the Oathbreaker? It says you have to be evil." The Oathbreaker is a paladin subclass (not a class) designed for NPCs. If your DM lets you use it, you're already being experimental, so if you want to play a kindhearted Oathbreaker, follow your bliss!

"Why are player characters punished for changing their alignment?" There is no general system in 5th-edition D&D for changing your alignment and there are no punishments or rewards in the core rules for changing it. You can just change it. Older editions had such rules.

Even though the rules of 5th-edition D&D state that players and DMs determine alignment, the suggested alignments in our books have undeniably caused confusion. That's why future books will ditch such suggestions for player characters and reframe such things for the DM.

"What about the werewolf's curse of lycanthropy? It makes you evil like the werewolf." The DM determines the alignment of the werewolf. For example, the werewolf you face might be a sweetheart. The alignment in a stat block is a suggestion to the DM, nothing more.

"What about demons, devils, and angels in D&D? Their alignments can't change." They can change. The default story makes the mythological assumptions we expect, but the Monster Manual tells the DM to change any monster's alignment without hesitation to serve the campaign.

"You've reminded us that alignment is a suggestion. Does that mean you're not changing anything about D&D peoples after all?" We are working to remove racist tropes from D&D. Alignment is only one part of that work, and alignment will be treated differently in the future.

"Why are you telling us to ignore the alignment rules in D&D?" I'm not. I'm sharing what the alignment rules have been in the Player's Handbook & Monster Manual since 2014. We know that those rules are insufficient and have changes coming in future products.
 

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billd91

Not your screen monkey (he/him)
It‘s almost incredible the degree of sacred cow murder 5e can get away with that 4E never could.

Well, there is a difference between cropping about 40-45% of something vs retaining it but fading it back in prominence.
 

Snarf Zagyg

Notorious Liquefactionist
It's easy, once you get the hang of it. We ignore all sorts of stuff: torches, spell components, familiars, gnomes, 4th Edition, Bob's drow rogue with the highly-detailed backstory...

"Yeah, Bob, we know. Your character concept is 'inspired' by that one time you went to a Rage Against the Machine concert. So, you do know that the underlying message behind the lyrics was not, 'Chaotic Neutral means You Don't Tell ME What to Do,' right?
 

The aligment is important in Dragonlance (the wizards with white, red and black tunics, three moons), although I hate that stupy manicheism. And your actions could cause a divine punishment by the dark powers of Ravenloft.

Some TTRPGs have got rules about virtues or codes of honor.

* Some characters from "Games of Thrones" in Ravenloft would be so....dooomed. Could a "good" character to execute a member of the night watch who says he has just survived an attack by the white walkers but maybe he is only a deserter?

* Are we going to replace spells with key aligments with anything as "smite infidels/unbelievers". And "detect evil" to be replace with "detect hotilisty".
 


Stacie GmrGrl

Adventurer
The rate things are going they're going to have to publish 6e urgently, just to update the lore.

This is what i was thinking. All these major changes in the ideology of D&D would make a lot more sense if they waited to do a 6th edition of the game. That's basically what they are doing now. Or even 5.5 Revised.
 

Alzrius

The EN World kitten
Nobody at WotC is working on 6th edition

thePHB is STILL in the top 200 books at Amazon.

You might be right, but I still remember people on these very boards saying that there was no way WotC would make a 5th Edition, because 4E's DDI was too profitable (having X subscribers paying Y dollars every month).
 

billd91

Not your screen monkey (he/him)
This is what i was thinking. All these major changes in the ideology of D&D would make a lot more sense if they waited to do a 6th edition of the game. That's basically what they are doing now. Or even 5.5 Revised.

Honestly, I don’t think these changes amount to a .5 edition. They’re mostly a relatively minor revision like the 2e reprinting with new art direction.
 

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