Average Manatee
Arcane
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2012
- Messages
- 15,213
Read the fucking thread dumbfuck. I didn't suggest the source.This is your source.
Remember that at the end of the game: you expose his lawbreaking, which was flagrant. He was a CE character who pretended to be lawful. In the same way a serial killer like Dexter pretends to be lawful. It doesn't make them actually lawful.
A LE character may break the law, but he's generally going to try to be as subtle as possible about it if he does and stay within the realm of technicalities. Because, in most cases, they really just fear the consequences of breaking the law, whatever those may be. If there are none, and they know it, then they might get a bit creative with their interpretations of the law and how they keep it. Even if that results in the death or suffering of another.
Law vs. chaos isn't about literally following the law or not. It's more about whether you adhere to the structure of an organization and bend it to your will, or don't care and go your own way. As you say, LE is only following the law out of fear, which is exactly the same reason a chaotic character might follow the law. So you can't use that to judge him. It's not like his plot was obvious, it took all of BG1 to expose it.
Going back to the BG description of alignments, tell me which of these characters is Sarevok:
orAn iron-fisted tyrant and a devious, greedy merchant
bloodthirsty buccanear and monster of low intelligence
It should be pretty easy seeing as Sarevok is literally an iron-fisted tyrant (both among those he commands and as he plans to be crowned grand duke of the city) and also literally a devious greedy merchant (creates an iron crisis to get rich off selling weapons).