[Lawful Good]: First of all, let me state that lawful good is not the Virgin! I repeat, lawful good is not the Virgin! Lawful good characters obey laws or precepts, no matter what rules they follow, they are lawful.
Lawful good characters value honor and tend to behave in line with social expectations. They will regulate their behavior according to the moral standards of society. In other words, this is a camp of quite good people. But when lawful
Good characters are in trouble when they are caught in a dilemma between law and morality.
For example, if a person breaks the law due to a tragic experience, a lawful good character sympathizes with the other person's experience, but must enforce the law.
For example, a person commits a crime but cannot be punished because he took advantage of a loophole in the law. If he abandons the law and insists on punishment, that is chaotic good. For example - Batman, a typical lawful good character. Knowing that
The Gotham City police and government are ineffective, but they still abide by the law.
For example, a lawful good character will harm innocent people when fulfilling their obligations because they obey the law. This is a trolley problem. Except for the paladins of the fire-haired lady, most paladins will fall into such a dilemma, or they will get through this psychological problem.
Difficulty, or it will fall, because the commandments cannot be changed, only people can, and changing means leaning towards the chaos and neutral camp.
In fact, the protagonist is still in a psychological dilemma when killing vampires and werewolves. He has to kill werewolves and vampires because he must abide by the laws of Kama Taj, so he is still in the lawful good camp.
[Neutral Good]: Benefactor camp, the true Virgin. Neutral and good characters believe that it is right to help the weak in difficulty.
Let's take werewolves as an example. Neutral and good characters will not take the law into account. They will see the miserable side of werewolves and try to help them. This motivation is not based on any values or requirements of the law, but only on their own.
Sympathy means that they don't care whether the person being helped will hurt others later, and will even defend them.
If you don’t take a werewolf as an example, let’s take a thief. After catching the thief, a neutral and good character may even offer money to help them live a new life. As for whether they will return to their old business, that is beyond their control.
This category may extend to anyone who breaks the law. As long as the person is in a bad situation, neutral and good characters will lend a helping hand.
Neutral and good characters will try their best to abide by dogmas and laws, but they will not obey them deliberately. To put it simply, they are simple good people and kind-hearted ordinary people. For example, the goddess of life among dragons, the silver dragon Tamara, lives in Paradise.
The beautiful silver dragon in the world, the true loving Mother.
For example, Spider-Man does not kill people. He will hand over criminals to the police, but he will also punish people who the police cannot punish.
[Chaotic Good]: Chaotic camp likes freedom and does not accept any restrictions. The same is true for chaotic good characters. They are kind-hearted and value their own freedom but also the freedom of others. They want to do good things but are not too well known by others.
Accept. Because they act regardless of the consequences, their moral concepts are not necessarily the same as others. They will help others in the way they think is right. As for the idea of being helped, it is not too important.
Then there is the neutral camp:
[Lawful Neutrality]: Obey the law and the ruling class. No matter whether the ruling class and the law are good or bad, lawful neutrality only cares about the rules, and the rules must be obeyed. Absolute order is more important than all moral conscience and personal interests.
important.
Lawful neutral characters will only act according to the rules, and their requests and situations are meaningless to lawful neutral characters.
When the protagonist forces Luca to sign the contract and kill the werewolf cub, it is a lawful neutral act, because the law must be obeyed.
[Absolute Neutrality]: A very, very difficult camp to understand. There are generally two situations.
The first one is to grow like a plant and act like a beast, because the beast cannot make moral judgments, and no matter what the beast does, it is for survival.
The second type is the characters running around in all camps. Characters who are versatile and insist on absolute balance are also absolutely neutral. They believe that law and chaos, good and evil are extremely dangerous prejudices.
For example, Mordenkainen is an archmage from the absolutely neutral camp.
[Chaotic Neutral]: Anarchist, a complete individualist, refuses to obey any rules. This does not need to be too far away, Captain Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean is like this, he does not care about other people's feelings, but he will not torture others.
To have fun, otherwise it would be in the chaotic evil camp.
What is even rarer is the strong chaotic neutral camp, which will deliberately destroy order and believe in true chaos.
Finally, there is the evil camp:
[Lawful Evil]: To put it simply, they are the bad guys according to the rules, such as lawyers and capitalists. They don’t care about the rights and freedoms of others, and they don’t mind bending the rules to satisfy themselves. Any mercy and kindness are for lawful evil people.
It makes no sense. Maybe lawful evil people will not harm children according to social rules, but if it is beneficial to them, they will find ways to leave such troublesome things to others to complete and benefit themselves.
Lawful characters will also be in a dilemma between "completing the rules" and "exercising evil", but lawful evil characters only think about whether they will be punished, and whether there are risks in disobeying orders and how big the risks are.
The most typical example is Hydra.
Note that the protagonist kills the werewolf child not for his own benefit, but as a legal requirement, so this is not a lawful evil act.
[Neutral Evil]: A selfish person, but will not cause additional killing and destruction, and will betray allies without hesitation. But if it benefits themselves, a neutral evil person will do it without hesitation.
Neutral evil will follow rules and regulations, but only if the rules are in their favor. If this is not the case, neutral evil will not hesitate to break the rules.
The most typical example of a neutral evil person is the time traveler, the fourth natural disaster, and the male protagonist of most fantasy time travel web novels from Qidian.
[Chaotic Evil]: Yeah! So cool! Chaotic evil people only care about their own extremely cruel and selfish desires. The organizations of chaotic evil people are often disorganized, loosely organized, and fight within themselves every day, because they do not accept being led and regard rules as
as a weakness.
Chaotic evil is the real trouble. Red dragons and demons are all characters in the chaotic evil camp.
Attention! This red dragon is not the red dragon in Qidian.com. Chaotic evil beings will torture their prey in order to satisfy their own desire for killing. No one can pass the review if they are written. Khorne in Warhammer 40K belongs to this camp.
, after all, there is still a funny demon trying to resist the Brass Throne.
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As for Chaos Law and other chaotic camps, I have never heard of them. If you haven’t read the rule book or the official novel, then this is the guideline. After all, this is similar to what is in the rule book.
As for the secondary settings of other novels, there is no need to mention them.
There is no Wolfsbane Potion, no! That is something from the Harry Potter world, not this world!