SRD:Lawful Evil

This material is published under the OGL

Lawful Evil, “Dominator”

A lawful evil villain methodically takes what he wants within the limits of his code of conduct without regard for whom it hurts. He cares about tradition, loyalty, and order but not about freedom, dignity, or life. He plays by the rules but without mercy or compassion. He is comfortable in a hierarchy and would like to rule, but is willing to serve. He condemns others not according to their actions but according to race, religion, homeland, or social rank. He is loath to break laws or promises.

This reluctance comes partly from his nature and partly because he depends on order to protect himself from those who oppose him on moral grounds. Some lawful evil villains have particular taboos, such as not killing in cold blood (but having underlings do it) or not letting children come to harm (if it can be helped). They imagine that these compunctions put them above unprincipled villains.

Some lawful evil people and creatures commit themselves to evil with a zeal like that of a crusader committed to good. Beyond being willing to hurt others for their own ends, they take pleasure in spreading evil as an end unto itself. They may also see doing evil as part of a duty to an evil deity or master.

Lawful evil is sometimes called “diabolical,” because devils are the epitome of lawful evil.

Lawful evil is the most dangerous alignment because it represents methodical, intentional, and frequently successful evil.


Back to Main Page 3.5e Open Game Content System Reference Document

Open Game Content (place problems on the discussion page).
This is part of the (3.5e) Revised System Reference Document. It is covered by the Open Game License v1.0a, rather than the GNU Free Documentation License 1.3. To distinguish it, these items will have this notice. If you see any page that contains SRD material and does not show this license statement, please contact an admin so that this license statement can be added. It is our intent to work within this license in good faith.
gollark: In retrospect, it would make much more sense to handle it differently. I could edit it now, actually.
gollark: I tried to pack as much information as possible ~~without very much work~~ into the URLs, so they also support base64'd base256 encoded numbers (yes this is a mess) and (really poorly done) RLE on those.
gollark: https://osmarks.tk/infipage/rz9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9z9 for example.
gollark: Besides, it's much more efficient to use the RLE capability.
gollark: How is that an exploit?
This article is issued from Dandwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.