How far can you go in Beta?
A Mythic spellbook is a completely separate Spellbook that upgrades slower as you get Mythic levels. You get a very small selection of spell slots (like 3-2-1) and you also get to choose some extra spells to customise it. For that reason if you want to fully utilise it (by, for example, having on Shaman druid, cleric and mage buffs at the same time) you are more or less forced into picking +4 spells/level. The option to mix this stuff is pretty powerful and personally pushes me to full classes without any dips.I'm curious how Lich and Angel Mythic Spellbook interacts with Shaman class, who are fullcasters.
Oh very well so I'm finished then. I am surprised somewhat at how stable generally game is and most quests compared to PKM. (not FPS tho. unlike PKM this one runs like shite on my system)EDIT: Actually basically every article about the beta says the prologue and first four chapters.
Yeah, I feel that Lawful and Chaotic there should be swapped.Another question: why is option #3 Lawful? Since when is allowing people to be vigilantes considered Lawful? That's a textbook Neutral reply.
What is with their artist and female jawlines.Here, have a datamined girl Angel portrait
Yeah, I feel that Lawful and Chaotic there should be swapped.Another question: why is option #3 Lawful? Since when is allowing people to be vigilantes considered Lawful? That's a textbook Neutral reply.
Retributive justice does not really work in a lawful society. Taking the law in your own hands is almost the definition of a chaotic alignment. And I was talking about the chaotic option to kill him yourself, that trickster shit is obviously chaotic. Unlike the random slaves, you are the commander of the Crusade and have the authority to sentence and execute criminals.Yeah, I feel that Lawful and Chaotic there should be swapped.Another question: why is option #3 Lawful? Since when is allowing people to be vigilantes considered Lawful? That's a textbook Neutral reply.
I disagree, the lawful reply is getting into retributive justice which is "lawful" in the sense of allowing victims to mete out punishment for the way they've been treated. Lawful alignment doesn't necessarily mean according to given cultural laws, so much as in line with order as a metaphysical concepts.
For similar reason, the chaotic option is appropriate since it involve changing the nature of an entity to something other in order to mess with it and also serve a sort of justice. I think this one also is the sort of thing that a lawful character isn't likely to even consider as an option in the first place.
no,it isn't. a hellknight that will not abide by the law of the land, but by his own strict code is not "chaotic" anything for example. lawful and chaotic is not about following the "law".Retributive justice does not really work in a lawful society. Taking the law in your own hands is almost the definition of a chaotic alignment.
Retributive justice does not really work in a lawful society. Taking the law in your own hands is almost the definition of a chaotic alignment. And I was talking about the chaotic option to kill him yourself, that trickster shit is obviously chaotic. Unlike the random slaves, you are the commander of the Crusade and have the authority to sentence and execute criminals.Yeah, I feel that Lawful and Chaotic there should be swapped.Another question: why is option #3 Lawful? Since when is allowing people to be vigilantes considered Lawful? That's a textbook Neutral reply.
I disagree, the lawful reply is getting into retributive justice which is "lawful" in the sense of allowing victims to mete out punishment for the way they've been treated. Lawful alignment doesn't necessarily mean according to given cultural laws, so much as in line with order as a metaphysical concepts.
For similar reason, the chaotic option is appropriate since it involve changing the nature of an entity to something other in order to mess with it and also serve a sort of justice. I think this one also is the sort of thing that a lawful character isn't likely to even consider as an option in the first place.
Looks like they plucked her straight from my sunday school nativity scene. But on that note, here're the companion portraits for the first three members of the Lich's graveguard, the replacement companions.Here, have a datamined girl Angel portrait. Guess it will go as we predicted - one portrait for each gender, maybe not for Aeon though.
Your hypothetical is not relevant to the scenario we are discussing. That scene happens in the Abyss, so local law is irrelevant. And do you really think a Hellknight would let the slaves kill their former master instead of executing them himself? And if anything, the player character is equivalent to the hellknight, enforcing his law on the locals. But there is a huge difference between enforcing the same law you have been vested with on everyone, and empowering everyone to enforce their own personal form of justice. The first is lawful, the second is chaotic.no,it isn't. a hellknight that will not abide by the law of the land, but by his own strict code is not "chaotic" anything for example. lawful and chaotic is not about following the "law".Retributive justice does not really work in a lawful society. Taking the law in your own hands is almost the definition of a chaotic alignment.
We have long moved past an eye for an eye as basis for law. If you really want to talk eye-for-an-eye as Lawful, then you should be arguing in favor of the Trickster option, which we both agree is chaotic as fuck. That's him LITERALLY getting exactly what he'd been giving.I see what you're saying, but I'm not sure I agree. I think it would depend on how it's undertaken. The earliest concepts of laws were retributive in nature. An eye for an eye, etc. and does not have any concepts of say, due process. In the scenario presented (I haven't played it), it looks like the option given to the slaves is controlled such that it's not going to have implications on the rest of society or others, hence no net disorderly implication other than the perpetrator getting what he deserves, so to speak.
We have long moved past an eye for an eye as basis for law. If you really want to talk eye-for-an-eye as Lawful, then you should be arguing in favor of the Trickster option, which we both agree is chaotic as fuck. That's him LITERALLY getting exactly what he'd been giving.I see what you're saying, but I'm not sure I agree. I think it would depend on how it's undertaken. The earliest concepts of laws were retributive in nature. An eye for an eye, etc. and does not have any concepts of say, due process. In the scenario presented (I haven't played it), it looks like the option given to the slaves is controlled such that it's not going to have implications on the rest of society or others, hence no net disorderly implication other than the perpetrator getting what he deserves, so to speak.
A) The past is not one huge, amorphous, unchanging blob. Societies evolved even then. Even a medieval society had moved past an-eye-for-an-eye.So what we've done in our modern technological society has implications on what's considered lawful in a fantasy setting that's broadly medieval-ish? Ok. Agree to disagree.
Yes, how DARE people discuss things in a forum?God alignment fags are worst of rpg world.
A) The past is not one huge, amorphous, unchanging blob. Societies evolved even then. Even a medieval society had moved past an-eye-for-an-eye.So what we've done in our modern technological society has implications on what's considered lawful in a fantasy setting that's broadly medieval-ish? Ok. Agree to disagree.
B) Trickster LITERALLY gives you an-eye-for-an-eye in this situation, and yet is not Lawful. Why are you not addressing this?
yeah something to add about Wenduag.That's the conclusion of her quest
A Mythic spellbook is a completely separate Spellbook that upgrades slower as you get Mythic levels. You get a very small selection of spell slots (like 3-2-1) and you also get to choose some extra spells to customise it. For that reason if you want to fully utilise it (by, for example, having on Shaman druid, cleric and mage buffs at the same time) you are more or less forced into picking +4 spells/level. The option to mix this stuff is pretty powerful and personally pushes me to full classes without any dips.I'm curious how Lich and Angel Mythic Spellbook interacts with Shaman class, who are fullcasters.
Oh very well so I'm finished then. I am surprised somewhat at how stable generally game is and most quests compared to PKM.EDIT: Actually basically every article about the beta says the prologue and first four chapters.
Chapter 1-3 is something you really want to save and savour. Because Chapter 4 has a bit too much of smacking packs of demons and then the mines, which really don't feel like they belong to that level (16+) of play anymore. Game still lacks magic play so much smackbashing of demonic bashsmackers occures. And do note, developers did not implement ALL the demon packs in C4 yet! Some are [Draft]. Ugh.Next: Seige of Drezen
One of the main aims of the law is in fact the very opposite of empowering the victim to seek justice. That's how you get personal vendettas and feuds. I agree that Batman is a chaotic hero, but I don't see how he is any different to the former slaves in the siituation we're discussing. It's vigilante justice, no matter how you cut it.Whether a society has changed its ideals from an eye for an eye or not doesn't imply that that behaviour is not lawful. Consider lawful evil behaviour, for instance. If nothing else, the concept of this trade is generally "fair".
The retributive part of the chaotic option is largely irrelevant in that it involves fundamentally altering the nature of the person and of reality and is therefore, not really a lawful response, whereas the other option is empowering the victims to seek justice which is arguably one of the main aims of law. I never claimed that being retributive is a sufficient condition for lawful behaviour. If it was, Batman would be a lawful superhero even though no one would suggest this.