I think it’s hard to say - morals are so subjective when you haven’t experienced a range of them, and being so young and still figuring out who she is, I think the people who guide and surround max as examples will really determine that, so I guess it would depend a lot on whether the Paladin is a “good” paladin, since he seems to be the main influential person left alive in the citadel
When I played a cleric in a D&D campaign, my character, a Firbolg doctor, was dedicated to helping others before herself. She was selfless to the point of spending all her personal money on supplies to protect the party. Healing was her calling. I feel that “selflessness” or a desire to protect others is required to be a “good” cleric.
I believe there are. However, sometimes leaders attract assistants or mentors who have other agendas. They help or mentor for their own gains. I hope she is able to find one that is true
That's a good point. If she has a strong moral compass than she should be able to distinguish healthy mentors from manipulative ones. Though I wonder if she would be a leader without a mentor putting her in that position?
Ps. If you hit "reply", it will chain your responses together rather than starting a new thread each time you leave a comment. :)
I think it’s hard to say - morals are so subjective when you haven’t experienced a range of them, and being so young and still figuring out who she is, I think the people who guide and surround max as examples will really determine that, so I guess it would depend a lot on whether the Paladin is a “good” paladin, since he seems to be the main influential person left alive in the citadel
very fair. So under the exact circumstances she's in right now, she's vulnerable to possibly "bad" influences
When I think of leaders - Bases on the beginnings I believe she will be ok. I hope she finds a trustworthy, steadfast mentor.
Do you think the citadel of Pantheon has any good mentors for her?
When I played a cleric in a D&D campaign, my character, a Firbolg doctor, was dedicated to helping others before herself. She was selfless to the point of spending all her personal money on supplies to protect the party. Healing was her calling. I feel that “selflessness” or a desire to protect others is required to be a “good” cleric.
What do you think?
I believe there are. However, sometimes leaders attract assistants or mentors who have other agendas. They help or mentor for their own gains. I hope she is able to find one that is true
That's a good point. If she has a strong moral compass than she should be able to distinguish healthy mentors from manipulative ones. Though I wonder if she would be a leader without a mentor putting her in that position?
Ps. If you hit "reply", it will chain your responses together rather than starting a new thread each time you leave a comment. :)
Thanks!