shilsen
Adventurer
The Sigil said:I have one very simple "acid test" for whether or not a given character concept can be a paladin that has saved me much grief...
"Do you (the player) feel the need to justify the character's actions?"
Everything about this character - from the write-up to the fact that it was submitted for a vote to the fact that you're challenging the paladin class by saying "there's nothing in the PHB that says I can't do it this way (a classic rules-lawyer technique to follow the letter but not the spirit of the rules) - says, "yes, I need to justify the character's actions."
And of course the answer to the acid test is: "if you feel the need to justify the way the character is acting, he is absolutely not paladin material."
Actually I'm primarily a DM, so I've mainly been thinking about the character from a DM perspective, and a player wouldn't have to justify it any more than any other paladin concept in my game. And I don't think the actions need justification. But I know many DMs/players have assumptions about the paladin which runs far beyond the PHB paladin as written, so I thought it would be an interesting experiment to see how the ENWorld community views it. And how they justify not allowing it

However, it should also be noted that I find Sir Cedric "morally wanting" as a paladin on more fronts than just the "acid test." Does a paladin IMC have to be a perfect paragon of holiness? No. Drinking and swearing as Sir Cedric does could probably get by - provided the paladin recognizes and acknowledges these as weaknesses/faults in his character.
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(I know, I know, "prostitution, etc. is/isn't evil because of moral absolutism/relativism" but the original piece had the tone that prostitution was not seen as "good" and while Cedric acknowledges this, he doesn't care... that's another rant entirely - my point is, in the fiction piece, Cedric seems to acknowledge he has moral flaws from his own point of view but embraces them instead of rejecting them, and that doesn't "jive" with my thoughts on paladinhood.)
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I know, "in his campaign brothels MIGHT be..." - but re-read the fiction piece. It's implied that brothels are not an honorable place and Cedric knows it. It's implied that swearing and drinking are not honorable pastimes and Cedric knows it. If he's not acting honorably, ESPECIALLY if he knows it and tacitly acknowledges, and even MORE ESPECIALLY if he embraces the practices and shows no desire to change, then by definition he's not living up to one of the points of the paladin code!
This is another of the places where I intentionally left out a little clarification. I visualized Cedric as aware that there is nothing intrinsically dishonorable about frequenting brothels, swearing or drinking, and being more than a little amused at Magnus' unthinking acceptance of the conventional attitudes. The last part of the diatribe would have involved a paragraph or so showing what Cedric was thinking, which would have involved amusement at Magnus' probable response as well as at the fact that his actions might be seen as inimical to the code even though he knows with complete certainty that they are not.
Perhaps I should write a version with all the 'answers' in there, sometime.
Slightly OT - The thread title is misleading... it suggests the character IS a paladin without room for debate - when it should be asking "is the character a paladin." You've "led" your audience to the conclusion you obviously want - to vote that he is a paladin - by your framing of the question, so the Yes/No data is flawed.![]()
Hey, I'm the DM - I already decided he works as a paladin
