The movie itself, not the main character

  • Orvorn
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    113 months ago

    The differences between Lawful Good and Lawful Evil are mostly aesthetic in my opinion. (They’re both evil.)

    • @[email protected]
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      83 months ago

      actually (🤓) no. Lawful means having a set of principles not neccesarily obeying law or other people’s rules.

    • TruthAintEasy
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      23 months ago

      Thars why my table calls it Aweful Good and refuses to include it. No true neutral either except for some eldrich beings

    • Poggervania
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      13 months ago

      Off-topic, but there’s a character in Disco Elysium that perfectly encapsulates your comment: Evart.

      In addition to helping you find your police-issued gun, the dude is an absolutely corrupt asshole, and does everything for the wrong reasons. However, he’s in charge of the labor union for the harbor in the city you are in, and he actually does a lot of good things for the workers - not because they are good, but because it furthers his political base and, if you take him at face value, he truly does believe in protecting the working class. Evart does everything very lawfully, so you can’t really arrest him for anything illegal because he hasn’t done anything illegal. So while it’s very easy to write him off as LE, he does have enough nuance to arguably be considered LG in some cases.

    • @Viking_Hippie
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      03 months ago

      Yeah, following laws because they’re the law with no regards to whether or not the law is just gets into bad places real fast. Opposite problem with chaotic good: automatically assuming that all laws and rules need to be opposed to do good leads to iffy or worse stuff too.

      In conclusion: Neutral Good is the only real Good