One of the biggest problems I have with the 5e cosmology change is the unnecessary movement of eladrin from Arborea to the feywild. If I wanted to have an exemplar from each alignment plane like past editions, what is the celestial for the chaotic good plane of arborea? (For reference, the past examplars were the celestial archeons, gaurdinals, rilmani and eladrin, The construct modrons, The aberration slaadi, and the fiendish yugioloths, devils and demons)
As of 5e Planescape, the LN modrons, LG archons, NG guardinals, TN rilmani, CN slaadi, CE demons, NE yugoloths and LE devils have all been reintroduced.
But the matter of CG exemplars remains unsolved. There are several CG celestials but no particular group stands out the way eladrin used to.
I agree it is annoying.
One fix I can envision is to just decide that celestial eladrin still exist. Because of the similarities and likely numerous portals between Arborea and the Feywild, eladrin could be prone to become fey or return to being celestials.
Chaotic Good characters are not willing to let rules or the law determine what they can/cannot do, but still put the betterment of others ahead of the betterment of themselves. As others have said, Robin Hood is a prime example. Bad Batch in Star Wars (the clones who go against their programming) would be another. Aladdin stealing bread and helping feed children could also fit (depending on context). Chaotics do not allow forces outside of morality to govern their decisions https://omegle****/https://xender.vip/ .
Compared to Chaotic Good, Lawful Good follows a set of rules. It does not HAVE to be the same as "following the law" but they usually overlap. Lawful Evil doesn't care about "the law", but they have their own code they strictly follow. One of these could be "not lying" even though they eat children. Vlad Dracul (the inspiration of Dracula) would be Lawful Evil as he had a very strict code, and followed it ruthlessly.
But regardless of everything, Chaotics do what they want, when they want, how they want for the reason they want to.
Robin Hood doesn't qualify here, unless we are talking about his departed soul ascending to the heavens and being reborn as a member of a species that, among all celestial creatures, most embodies the essences of chaos and good. It is a very setting-specific concept, the setting being Planescape.
One of the biggest problems I have with the 5e cosmology change is the unnecessary movement of eladrin from Arborea to the feywild. If I wanted to have an exemplar from each alignment plane like past editions, what is the celestial for the chaotic good plane of arborea? (For reference, the past examplars were the celestial archeons, gaurdinals, rilmani and eladrin, The construct modrons, The aberration slaadi, and the fiendish yugioloths, devils and demons)
As of 5e Planescape, the LN modrons, LG archons, NG guardinals, TN rilmani, CN slaadi, CE demons, NE yugoloths and LE devils have all been reintroduced.
But the matter of CG exemplars remains unsolved. There are several CG celestials but no particular group stands out the way eladrin used to.
I agree it is annoying.
One fix I can envision is to just decide that celestial eladrin still exist. Because of the similarities and likely numerous portals between Arborea and the Feywild, eladrin could be prone to become fey or return to being celestials.
Expanded 5e Spelljammer Cosmology
Chaotic Good characters are not willing to let rules or the law determine what they can/cannot do, but still put the betterment of others ahead of the betterment of themselves. As others have said, Robin Hood is a prime example. Bad Batch in Star Wars (the clones who go against their programming) would be another. Aladdin stealing bread and helping feed children could also fit (depending on context). Chaotics do not allow forces outside of morality to govern their decisions https://omegle****/ https://xender.vip/ .
Compared to Chaotic Good, Lawful Good follows a set of rules. It does not HAVE to be the same as "following the law" but they usually overlap. Lawful Evil doesn't care about "the law", but they have their own code they strictly follow. One of these could be "not lying" even though they eat children. Vlad Dracul (the inspiration of Dracula) would be Lawful Evil as he had a very strict code, and followed it ruthlessly.
But regardless of everything, Chaotics do what they want, when they want, how they want for the reason they want to.
Robin Hood doesn't qualify here, unless we are talking about his departed soul ascending to the heavens and being reborn as a member of a species that, among all celestial creatures, most embodies the essences of chaos and good. It is a very setting-specific concept, the setting being Planescape.
Expanded 5e Spelljammer Cosmology