Me too, but chances are we have to kill him anyway, why make things harder on ourselves?I would like to hear what the knight has to say before he's hanged. Out of curiosity.
I personally don't give a damn what he has to say. Westeros has way too many "ask no questions" oh-so-honorable knights. Even Ser Barristan, arguable the most honorable knight currently in existence, defined his honor as standing outside the door while Rhaella was brutally raped and doing nothing while Rickard Stark burned alive and Brandon Stark strangled himself trying to save his father.I would like to hear what the knight has to say before he's hanged. Out of curiosity.
I wanna know how guilty the lord is.The main question is, do we actually care? Does it bring back the dead peasants or the soldiers we mowed down after he ordered this suicide charge?
He probably has a nice sob story lined up or will cite duty and other excuses, but that doesn't change any of the facts.
He came here to kill a undetermined warlock.
They either decided that killing all villagers would be the easiest way to do so or just declared someone the warlock, tried to kill him or her and thus prompted the village to defend themselves.
He then lost control of his men, who started to torch the whole place.
When we arrived, he didn't take the option to reestablish order. He could have just told them to obey our reasonable command to stop the slaughter and burning.
Instead he rallied his men to press the attack, causing more death needlessly.
He broke the peace. He slaughtered people without reason. Even if his Lord had given those exact orders, he can't just order the villages of other Lord torched, so the order was invalid from the start.
What they did here is no different, not even the slightest bit, then what any random brigand might have done.
So lets hang them like those and call it a day.
We know from the questioning that he ahs send those goons here one way or another and "burn the witch that is probably there, even through I have no idea who it might" is also officially a reason he took from the stupid pile to justify this junk.
Ah, but here's his point. You area essentially, doing said good-ish deeds because it pleases you. There is no cost to you, it's simply a flight of whimsy.Not really, most people when they lose nothing by doing it will help each other, so I would argue that human nature is slightly more good than evil.
Not much more good than evil though.
On that note, I'm still rather surprised we never got Evil for our interactions with the Archons like... you know... tearing a soul apart to create a vessel for our pagan god.Ah, but here's his point. You area essentially, doing said good-ish deeds because it pleases you. There is no cost to you, it's simply a flight of whimsy.
Good and Evil here is a lot more a "selfless vs selfish" scale than "good guy/bad guy".
Yet we get good points regardless of our intentions.
Which flies in the face of Xor being a Boy Scout after helping engineer the plague that gutted Lys. He simply didn't recognize the evil he was doing, he thought he was helping people even, so didn't change alignment.
Only good and evil acts that push the envelope of our behavior give points.Ah, but here's his point. You area essentially, doing said good-ish deeds because it pleases you. There is no cost to you, it's simply a flight of whimsy.
Good and Evil here is a lot more a "selfless vs selfish" scale than "good guy/bad guy".
Yet we get good points regardless of our intentions.
Which flies in the face of Xor being a Boy Scout after helping engineer the plague that gutted Lys. He simply didn't recognize the evil he was doing, he thought he was helping people even, so didn't change alignment.
... Ok?Only good and evil acts that push the envelope of our behavior give points.
Thats why Vee, danny, and lya arent good despite all the free healing.
I think @Artemis1992 did it?Btw, @TotallyNotEvil, while you're here can you write up loadouts for Dany and Lya?
I'd argue against that. The Archons saw sacrifice, even sacrifice of a demon, as evil until we crit our diplomacy roll against them.Thing is, doing evil stuff to evil people is not considered evil.
But doing good stuff for good people is still good.
This could be considered to be the bias.
Ah, I'd completely missed that.
I'd argue against that. The Archons saw sacrifice, even sacrifice of a demon, as evil until we crust our diplomacy roll against them.
Yeah, that's rather annoying. :/
We haven't spent a lot of time as either good or evil.My main issue is that I feel a strong disconnections between what motives are driving our decisions (Greed, Pride, Greed, Selfishness and Greed) and where we are on the Good-Evil axis.
Viserys suddenly going Paragon of Virtue would be odd to say the least and half the knee-jerk reaction to alignment based Will saves probably stems from our stints of Good where we needed to pass saves to play as usual.
The mutilating of the devil is easy to justify with the Archons.
"But Archons, what about the demons and devils? Don't they have dignity and a right to live too?"
"What? No! Who told you that? Fuck the hellspawn and pitspawn, the cosmos will be a better place if they all die."
I'm fairly sure the only reason Viserys isn't a White Knight is because his class requires him to be non-good.We haven't spent a lot of time as either good or evil.
Also Viserys motivations are such a mess because they reflect the threads motivations.
Except... they aren't that over the place if you take the Good-Evil debate out of the picture.We haven't spent a lot of time as either good or evil.
Also Viserys motivations are such a mess because they reflect the threads motivations.