How Many Jeep Dragons Were Made

How Many Jeep Dragons Were Made

Alignment Charts

Alignment Charts

Origin: Dungeons and Dragons

About

Alignment Charts (also known as Character Alignments) refer to images presenting different categorized subjects -- usually nine -- in a manner that strongly resembles Demotivational Posters. Images within alignment charts usually show characters from a particular subculture (with either a quote or a reasoning below the title of the character's alignment to reflect why they are in that position), but the chart manages to reach levels of irony that reaction images, inanimate objects, and even food can be grouped and categorized.

Origin

The concept of character alignment as it is typically viewed comes from the game Dungeons and Dragons released on 1974,[9] wherein players were able to create their very own characters, customizing a variety of different aspects. One of these aspects is the alignment of the character, which basically indicated whether your character was good or evil and whether he followed the law or not.

The system begun operating on two axis by the 1977 release of Dungeons and Dragons [1], one consisting of "Lawful", "Neutral", and "Chaotic", and the other of "Good", "Neutral", and "Evil"; you would combine one of the traits of the first axis with one of the traits of the other, thus resulting in alignments such as "Lawful Good" or "Chaotic Evil", with nine possible alignments in total.

5×5 Alignment Charts

5×5 Alignment Charts were never designed by the official game. Instead, the additional categories for both axis -- social and rebel; and moral and impure respectively -- are products from the internet. The earliest known instances of a 5×5 Alignment Chart being used dates back to June 5, 2011, when the DeviantArt account DoASpotCheck uploaded their 5 by 5 Alignment Chart comprised of different characters from various subcultures that they feel epitomizes each category.[6]

LAWFUL GOOD SOCIAL GOOD NEUTRAL GOOD REBEL GOOD CHAOTIC GOOD LAWFUL MORAL SOCIAL MORAL NEUTRAL MORAL REBEL MORAL CHAOTIC MORAL LAWFUL NEUTRAL SoCIAL NEUTRAL TRUE NEUTRAL REBEL NEUTRAL CHAOTIC NEUTRAL I'm a random LAWFUL IMPURE SOCIAL IMPURE NEUTRAL IMPURE REBEL IMPURE CHAOTIC IMPURE LAWFUL EVIL SOCIAL EVIL NEUTRAL EVIL CHAOTIC EVIL www.doaspotcheck.blogspot.com REBEL EVIL Dungeons & Dragons television program

Spread

The concept has been implemented by fans in other works of fiction once it has gained traction. The practice of categorizing subjects in forums and image boards has often brought much debate and criticism due to disagreements from all sides.[3] [7]

Alignment as a Meme

This all becomes a meme with the practice of taking images of characters (or concepts, or a variety of other things) and (usually in the form of a demotivational poster) labeling them as one of the nine alignments. This is then expanded upon by editing together such images (usually following a theme) into a chart, thus giving a representation of the conventional nine alignments -- 5×5 charts with a total of 25 alignments exist. Images dealing with just one of the alignments, or just with the subject of alignment itself, also exist. For example, on July 23rd, 2017, Twitter user @tinysubversions[10] posted an alignment chart of Dungeons and Dragons alignments that gained over 2,000 retweets and 3,800 likes (shown below, left). Another popular joke version was posted on August 10th of that year by @aurelianrabbit which made each space on the chart a way to store bread. The tweet gained over 25,000 retweets and 59,000 likes (shown below, right).

True Neutral LAWFUL GOOD Lawful Neutral NEUTRAL GOOD Neutral Good CHAOTIC GOOD Chaotic Good LAWFUL NEUTRAL Lawful Evil TRUE NEUTRAL Neutral Evil CHAOTIC NEUTRAL Lawful Good LAWFUL EVIL Chaotic Evil NEUTRAL EVIL Chaotic Neutral CHAOTIC EVIL Dungeons & Dragons text font lawful good neutral good chaotic good using a bread box using a bag clip using the 'bottle hack lawful neutral true neutral chaotic neutral reusing the bag clip rubberband twist and tuck lawful evil tying a knot neutral evil just tucking chaotic evil leaving the bag open text furniture line

As for the actual origins of this practice, things aren't very clear, but many demotivationals exist. Such comparisons have been made since the first release of Dungeons and Dragons, though it's possible that the book Complete Scoundrel, published in 2007, may have popularized the concept.

Many decades after the concept was made famous, Alignment Charts remain a popular subject for discussion and deviation in online communities. By 2012 a crude template for the alignment chart was made available on Polyvore by user ellerigby13. 74 deviations were produced from this template.[8] A subreddit with 1,537 readers exists that showcases alignment charts submitted by users.[4] On DeviantArt, there is a considerably large number of around 34,000 deviations under the tag "character alignment."[2] A Pinterest gallery dedicated to collecting Alignment Charts has gained 103 followers.[5]

Top entries this week

Search Interest

External References

Recent Videos (1)

Recent Images (302)

Tags

Additional References

Entry Editors (9)

Request Editorship

Digital Archaeologist & Archivist & Pundit & Early Adopter (#8)

Database Moderator & Tikibar Management

Database Moderator & Rage Comicologist

Entry Moderator & Tumblrologist

Know Your Meme Universal Champion

Administrator & Meme Daddy

Digital Archaeologist & Treasurer & Media Maid

Digital Archaeologist & Treasurer & Collection Butler

Comments

The latest from KYM

Video

The Rock Gets Into NFTs

Please do not screenshot Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson's NFTs guys they've got drive and power.

Nov 30th, 2021 04:43 PM

Video

Editorial

Top TV Memes: The Best Formats From 'Tiger King 2'

The new season is here, and its…something. These are some of the best viral jokes from the new installment of the famous documentary.

Nov 30th, 2021 04:52 AM

Collection

Editorial

Weekend Meme Roundup: Conspiracy Chart, Omicron Variant, GirlBoss War Criminal

Welcome to the Weekend Meme Roundup, where the weekend's biggest memes are rounded up and examined more closely. Last weekend's biggest memes were Girlboss War Criminal, Omicron Variant, and Conspiracy Chart.

Nov 30th, 2021 06:02 PM

Editorial

Editorial

16 People Who Are Either 13 Or 30

Can you guess how old these people are?

Nov 30th, 2021 01:49 PM

Collection

How Many Jeep Dragons Were Made

Source: https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/alignment-charts

SHARE
    Blogger Comment
    Facebook Comment

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar

banner