Nevill
Arcane
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2009
- Messages
- 11,211
Ah, but I also said that I only find a certain brand of evil appealing.
Dio's lust for MOAR POWAH always seemed to me like a fool's errand. In the end, what did he get? He threw his family, his fiancée, his allies, his position and finally himself into a grinder in the hopes to squeeze just a bit more, but never, not once in his life, was he content. There is always someone more powerful than you, unless you are a God (and maybe even then). So he pursued Godhood fo millenia, and how did he meet it? An old, ugly, crippled, dying man. He had his five minutes of glory, and was swiftly taken down by the heroes. He sacrificed everything he had, and he still achieved nothing. There is not a single point in his life that you could call a victory, since none of these 'victories' had meaning outside of the greater goal.
Come to think of it, this is a punishment in itself.
Now, a hero or a villain who takes pleasure in the very act of living, whose goal is simply to have one hell of a life, that hero would be nigh impossible to defeat. You could kill them, perhaps, but in the end they would still have their wish fulfilled.
I want a character who can see merit in this line of thought.
Dio's lust for MOAR POWAH always seemed to me like a fool's errand. In the end, what did he get? He threw his family, his fiancée, his allies, his position and finally himself into a grinder in the hopes to squeeze just a bit more, but never, not once in his life, was he content. There is always someone more powerful than you, unless you are a God (and maybe even then). So he pursued Godhood fo millenia, and how did he meet it? An old, ugly, crippled, dying man. He had his five minutes of glory, and was swiftly taken down by the heroes. He sacrificed everything he had, and he still achieved nothing. There is not a single point in his life that you could call a victory, since none of these 'victories' had meaning outside of the greater goal.
Come to think of it, this is a punishment in itself.
Now, a hero or a villain who takes pleasure in the very act of living, whose goal is simply to have one hell of a life, that hero would be nigh impossible to defeat. You could kill them, perhaps, but in the end they would still have their wish fulfilled.
I want a character who can see merit in this line of thought.