NetHack/Setting

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=Character Classes= While not "true" characters in and of themselves, many of the available roles have traits and features associated with them that remain consistent across playthroughs, such as a specific pantheon of gods (with the exception of the Priest, who can serve any of the pantheons at random) and a unique set of abilities and features.

Archeologist
"Archeologists understand dungeons pretty well; this enables them to move quickly and sneak up on the local nasties. They start equipped with the tools for a proper scientific expedition."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Adventure Archaeologist: Complete with pick-axe, bullwhip and Indy-style fedora.
 * Character Alignment: Archeologists can be lawful or neutral.
 * Dual Wielding
 * Fragile Speedster/Weak but Skilled: While they tend to start with low strength and aren't exactly the most combat-ready class at the beginning, their intrinsic speed and stealth lends themselves a lot to hit-and-run tactics that can carry them a long way, and their starting tinning kit makes it easier to safely procure food and intrinsics. Pick-axes can also provide training for a solid weapon in the mattock.
 * Grave Robbing: Archaeologists are penalized for doing this.
 * Mayincatec: The theme of their quest, and their pantheon consists of Quetzalcoatl, Camaxtli, and Huhetotl.
 * Mummies: Plenty of them appear on the quest.
 * Whip It Good: One of their starting weapons is a bullwhip.
 * Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: Invoked - their quest branch's monster generation is heavily skewed towards all sorts of snakes.

Barbarian
"Barbarians are warriors out of the hinterland, hardened to battle. They begin their quests with naught but uncommon strength, a trusty hauberk, and a great two-handed sword."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Acquired Poison Immunity: Barbarians start the game with this, increasing the availability of options for food.
 * An Axe to Grind: Starts the game with either a standard or double-headed battle axe. Cleaver is an artifact battle-axe that appears as their first sacrifice gift.
 * Barbarian Hero
 * Blade of Fearsome Size: Barbarians have a 50% chance of their starting sword being a two-handed sword.
 * Character Alignment: Barbarians can be chaotic or neutral.
 * Conan the Barbarian: The core inspiration for the role and their quest, right down to their pantheon including Crom as the neutral god, and Set serving as the chaotic god (though his encyclopedia entry returns a quote about [[Egyptian Mythology/Characters|the Egyptian Set).
 * Dumb Muscle: Subverted, as they have a high spellcasting penalty and start with low wisdom and intelligence stats, but don't necessarily suffer for it and have the same capacity for intelligence as other player characters.
 * Indian Mythology: Mitra, the lawful Barbarian god, is based on Mithra, who originated as an Indian deity and was translated in Zoroastrianism to an attendant to Ahura Mazda and an enemy to Angra Mainyu.
 * Genius Bonus: Those who know their folkloric trivia will recognize the last name as that of
 * Master Swordsman: One of three roles that can reach Skilled or better in 5 of the 6 sword-based skill classes.
 * Unskilled but Strong: Shares this with the Valkyrie - both are heavily combat-focused classes that have heavy spellcasting penalties but can easily get by on stellar armor and weapons, and the barbarian also has the additional boon of starting with intrinsic poison resistance.

Caveman
"Cavemen and Cavewomen start with exceptional strength but, unfortunately, with neolithic weapons."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * All Cavemen Were Neanderthals: The Caveman role plays this fairly straight, with the quest guardians even being called neanderthals.
 * Babylonian Mythology: Their pantheon consists of Anu, Ishtar and Ashtar.
 * Carry a Big Stick: The club is one of their starting weapons, and their quest artifact, the Sceptre of Might, is a mace. Cavemen can attain Expert skill in both.
 * Difficult but Awesome/Weak but Skilled: Cavemen are considered a "harder" variant of the Valkyrie, as they are a combat-oriented role with harsh spell-casting penalties in exchange for excelling in combat - but they also cannot use most edged weapons without receiving them as sacrifice gifts, and their starting club and leather armor are also lackluster. However, multishot spears at Expert skill can do absurd amounts of damage, and the aklys upgrade in 3.6.1 makes it a stellar weapon for most of the game.
 * Magikarp Power: Those that make it to the late game have more choices in food due to their lack of cannibalism penalties, and their quest artifact, The Sceptre of Might, is also considered one of the best in the game for its ability to invoke conflict.
 * I'm a Humanitarian: Cavemen can eat monsters of the same race as them with no penalty, which among other things makes tine of nurse meat far more beneficial for human Cavemen compared to other roles.
 * Noble Savage: Cavemen can be lawful or neutral, and many of their role's aspects are drawn from this (e.g. Shaman Karnov, the quest leader).
 * Suffer the Slings: Cavemen start the game with a sling and a set of rocks and flint stones.
 * Useless Useful Spell: Practically anything in a Caveman's hands, but a special mention goes to their special spell - dig. It's a high-level matter spell, and there's very few meaningful matter spells to train with. the spellcasting penalties also ensure that most Cavemen won't even bother, and the spell's function is superseded by more plentiful items such as pick-axes and wands of digging.

Healer
"Healers are wise in medicine and apothecary. They know the herbs and simples that can restore vitality, ease pain, anesthetize, and neutralize poisons; and with their instruments, they can divine a being's state of health or sickness. Their medical practice earns them quite reasonable amounts of money, with which they enter the dungeon."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Acquired Poison Immunity: Healers always start with poison resistance, likely due to immunizing themselves.
 * Amoral Doctor: Implied by the fact that they're only Neutral, though in NetHack terms this isn't so much fully amoral as it is "not above being unscrupulous".
 * Character Alignment: Healers are exclusively neutral.
 * Combat Medic: Can serve as this with some luck in finding armor and training with early weapons that they can master. Staves, knives and unicorn horns in particular (often used to cure Standard Status Ailments) can be trained to Expert.
 * Classical Mythology/Greek Mythology: Healers are styled after classical-era doctors and surgeons (e.g. humour theory is still in practice, their starting weapon is a scalpel), and their pantheon consists of Athena, Hermes and Poseidon, with a Cyclops serving as the quest nemesis.
 * Crippling Overspecialization: Healers excel at healing spells, but are restricted in all other spell classes and tend to lack any real offensive options in the beginning. Downplayed somewhat in that it doesn't cut them off from casting them completely, merely restricting the amount of benefits they can expect from such spells - magic missile is still plenty powerful in their hands, for example.
 * Deadly Doctor: A high-level Healer can be quite fearsome.
 * Instant Sedation: Healers start with a wand of sleep.
 * Knife Nut: Healers can reach Expert skill in knives, and can throw multiple knives at once.
 * Simple Staff: The base item for their quest artifact, the Staff of Aesclapius.
 * Useless Useful Spell: Cure sickness, their special spell... which cures sickness (and also sliming).
 * Boring but Practical: It's also the only such means of curing sickness that can be made 100% reliable, since even blessed unicorn horns may fail occasionally, and the special spell bonus on top of it being an "emergency spell" allows for a lot of leniency in terms of armor choices.
 * Weak but Skilled: Healers start with little in the way of armor, food, and weapons, but with care and diligence can still make it a few levels - enough to gain reliable access to the stone-to-flesh spell (which can easily solve any food related problems for the entire game). Their starting cash and stethoscope can be used to sniff out or purchase solid armor and weapons, and their healing abilities and items allow them to reliably stay alive and support their pets well (especially for protection rackets and/or Pacifist Runs).

Knight
"Knights are distinguished from the common skirmisher by their devotion to the ideals of chivalry and by the surpassing excellence of their armor."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Amplifier Artifact: The Magic Mirror of Merlin is the Knight quest artifact, and gives double damage to some spells cast by Knights in addition to its other benefits.
 * Blade on a Stick: Knights start with a lance.
 * Celtic Mythology: Their pantheon consists of Lugh, Brigid and Manannan Mac Lir.
 * Chess Motifs: Knight have a special intrinsic jumping ability that lets them move like actual chess knights, though with the restriction of not having their jumping path obstructed.
 * The Code: Knights are exclusively Lawful and expected to adhere by an in-game code of chivalry, which penalizes them in particular for overeating, stealing, and using poisoned weapons, or else attacking immobilized or fleeing foes.
 * Cool Horse: The Knight always starts with a saddled pony, and their starting apples and carrots are primarily meant for the steed - horses are vegetarian, and thus gain more nutrition from them.
 * Good Old Fisticuffs: Knights can attain Expert in bare-handed combat.
 * Heroes Prefer Swords: Knights start with a long sword.
 * Knight Errant in Shining Armor
 * Lightning Bruiser: Combining their lance with the speed of their mount allows Knights to joust and pound several enemies to death, potentially before they can actually get a hit in.
 * Magic Knight: Knights are capable of becoming adept spellcasters, especially once they find casting-friendly armor. Their quest artifact, the Magic Mirror of Merlin, also grants double spell damage exclusively to Knights.
 * Master Swordsman: One of three roles that can reach Skilled or better in 5 of the 6 sword-based skill classes.
 * Mounted Combat: The Knight excels most at this among the playable roles per Lightning Bruiser, and they can also mount steeds without decreasing their tameness.
 * The Paladin: Knights draw from this archetype: they can only be Lawful humans, are expected to follow a moral code to maintain their alignment, and their most ideal forms of offense are especially effective against demons and undead, such as...
 * Turn Undead: In special role ability and spell form!

Monk
"Monks are ascetics, who by rigorous practice of physical and mental disciplines have become capable of fighting as effectively without weapons as with. They wear no armor but make up for it with increased mobility."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * All Monks Know Kung Fu
 * Bare-Fisted Warrior Monk: The Monk is geared towards fighting unarmed, and gets the most damage out of fighting with their bare (technically gloved) hands among the available roles.
 * It's less powerful than was intended, though - the role is ported directly from SLASH'EM, where the monk also had access to special techniques, and the quest was balanced with this in mind. The result is the quest nemesis, Master Kaen, gaining a reputation as That One Boss.
 * Canon Immigrant: The Monk role was imported from SLASH'EM.
 * Character Alignment: Monks can be any alignment.
 * Chinese Mythology: Their pantheon consists of Shan Lai Ching, Chih Sung-tzu and Huan Ti.
 * Enlightenment Superpowers: Of a sort - Monks arr solid spellcasters, and actually exercise wisdom by going hungry. Their quest artifact, the Eyes of the Overworld, also gives them 'astral vision'.
 * Self-Imposed Challenge: The Monk is the most friendly role by design for several conducts - their diet is 'naturally' vegetarian (eating meat incurs a -1 alignment penalty), their proficiency in martial arts is conducive towards weaponless conduct (which only counted wielded weapons), and they can even be used for "foodless" runs (evoking the image of an ascetic survivng only on prayer).
 * Shaolin and Wu Tang: Monks are styled after this archetype.
 * Simple Staff: One of the few weapons they can actually take skill levels in.
 * Useless Useful Spell: Restore ability, their special spell (with the spellbook being their crowning gift) can restore lowered stats... and so can unicorn horns for absolutely no cost in magic power. And unlike the potion, the spell can't restore lost levels. <--In 3.7, the nerf to the unicorn horn's healing ability makes this spell more useful.-->

Priest
"Priests and Priestesses are clerics militant, crusaders advancing the cause of righteousness with arms, armor, and arts thaumaturgic. Their ability to commune with deikties via prayer occasionally extricates them from peril, but can also put them in it."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Carry a Big Stick: Priests start the game with a mace. The aklys is also a prime choice of weapon that doubled as a ranged attack.
 * Character Alignment: Priests can be any alignment.
 * Church Militant: Of the "blunt weapons" kind - all edged weapon skills are restricted, but in return the Priest can obtain skilled or better in several bashing weapon classes such as the club, mace and quarterstaff.
 * Drop the Hammer: One of three roles that can attain Expert in hammer.
 * Detect Magic: Priests have the innate ability to recognize if an item is cursed or blessed.
 * Holy Burns Evil: Priests start with holy water for blessing items (blessed items do some extra damage to undead and demons), and garlic that can be set down to ward off undead, naturally including vampires.
 * Turn Undead: In special role ability and spell form!

Ranger
"Rangers are most at home in the woods, and some say slightly out of place in a dungeon. They are, however, experts in archery as well as tracking and stealthy movement."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Anarchy Is Chaos: Rangers can be chaotic or neutral, and based on the details of the quest, the player character's fellow rangers aren't entirely keen on this "civilization" thing.
 * The Archer/Forest Ranger: An archer that hails from a dwelling in the woods.
 * Fish Out of Water: Implied by their guidebook description.
 * Roman Mythology: Their pantheon consists of Mercury, Venus and Mars.

Rogue
"Rogues are agile and stealthy thieves, with knowledge of locks, traps, and poisons. Their advantage lies in surprise, which they employ to great advantage."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Back Stab: The role's unique skill, which increases damage against fleeing foes. It does not work when Dual Wielding, however.
 * Character Alignment: Rogues are always Chaotic.
 * Dual Wielding: Short swords are among the best offhand weapons for this purpose, and the rogue can attain Expert skill with twoweaponing in general and short swords in particular.
 * Fafhrd and The Gray Mouser: Their pantheon is derived from the stories' universe, consisting of Issek, Mog and Kos, and their quest leader is none other than...
 * Flechette Storm: Capable of dealing absurd "storm" damage with knives, darts, and especially their trademark daggers.
 * Knife Nut: They start with a plentiful stack of daggers, and can attain Expert in both daggers and knives.
 * Lightning Bruiser: Rogues often start with exceptional strength befitting that of a thug, and combined with the above projectile-throwing abilities and a solid stack of daggers, anyone within line of sight is good as Swiss cheese.
 * Master Swordsman: One of three roles that can reach Skilled or better in 5 of the 6 sword-based skill classes.
 * Video Game Stealing: Of a sort. Rogues always start the game with a sack, which can be used for credit cloning and stashing unpaid items within for a pet to carry outside of the store (where they "legally" become yours). They don't have an actual theft attack, though, being more of a thug or robber that wouldn't be out of place in Discword.
 * Unusually, they're the only chaotic-compatible role to not get an alignment bonus for stealing from shops.
 * What, you want a medal for doin' yer job?

Samurai
"Samurai are the elite warriors of feudal Nippon. They are lightly armored and quick, and wear the dai-sho, two swords of the deadliest keenness."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Blade of Fearsome Size: The Tsurugi of Muramasa, the Samurai quest artifact, is a large two-handed tsurugi that can literally cleave many foes in two, instantly killing the victim.
 * Blind Weaponmaster: Samurai were the class of choice for zen players due to their inherent melee strength; they also have a chance to start with a blindfold, and prior to the release of 3.6.0, they were one of the few roles that could.
 * Character Alignment: Samurai are always lawful.
 * Dual Wielding
 * Gratuitous Japanese: When playing as a Samurai, the game refers to certain items by Japanese names of varying accuracy, but otherwise treats them the same. The role itself is styled after the stereotypical samurai's honorable service to his lord and country, and the Quest in particular is full of this.
 * Grave Robbing: Samurai are penalized for this.
 * Helmets Are Hardly Heroic: Samurai start without one, though naturally they'll want to find one before diving into the depths of the dungeon proper.
 * Heroes Prefer Swords: Samurai always start with a katana and washizaki (the role's name for a short sword), and the katana is an excellent twoweapon choice for the offhand. Their quest artifact, the Tsurugi of Muramasa, can bisect some monsters in half.
 * Japanese Mythology: The basis of their pantheon, naturally, consisting of Amaterasu Omikami, Raijin and Susanowo.
 * Katanas Are Just Better: All samurai start with a katana (otherwise called a samurai sword), and their first sacrifice gift will always be the artifact katana Snickersnee. Samurai wielding katana can break enemy weapons with it.
 * Master Swordsman: Along with bieng one of three roles that can reach Skilled or better in 5 of the 6 sword-based skill classes, Samurai are capable of reaching Expert skill level in three of them.
 * Ninja: The only ninjas in the game are found on the Samurai quest. It's also one of the role's rank titles.
 * Ronin: Averted with the quest storyline, which sees you returning to your homeland and lord to aid them.
 * Stock Ninja Weaponry: Samurai can reach Skilled level or better in washizaki, tanto, nunchaku, and shuriken (i.e. short swords, knives, flails and... shuriken).

Tourist
"Tourists start out with lots of gold (suitable for shopping with), a credit card, lots of food, some maps, and an expensive camera. Most monsters don't like being photographed."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Big Eater: Implied by the usually high amount of starting food.
 * Blinding Camera Flash: Tourists always start the game with an expensive camera that's used for this purpose.
 * Character Alignment: Tourists are always neutral.
 * Discworld: The entire basis of the role, complete with their pantheon featuring Blind Io, The Lady and Offler, acting as the quest leader, and the quest nemesis being
 * Dual Wielding
 * Flechette Storm: Tourists can achieve Expert skill in darts and daggers.
 * Jack of All Trades: Able to attain Basic skill or better in every form of weapon save for clubs.
 * Lethal Joke Character: The Tourist has the lowest starting AC in the game, with nothing but the Hawaiian shirt on their backs as armor, and their combat stats are lackluster. Their only means of starting offense is a stack of throwing darts, and their other items aren't much use in the way of combat beyond some healing potions. Tourists also start with a fair amount of gold, and if they can safely make it to a shop, they can easily buy their way into a solid kit - their natural high Charisma can offset shops overcharging them, and being a Jack of All Trades can get quite a lot out of almost any weapon. Their starting kits also include a flashy camera that can be used to deter and blind attackers, and a pile of food that'll keep them from going hungry for quite a while, which all leads to...
 * Magikarp Power: Surviving long enough to clear their quest gives them the benefit of several in-branch shops and a relative Breather Boss in their quest nemesis. Their quest artifact is also the most desirable in the game, effectively an infinite-use scroll of charging that also grants magic resistance, telepathy, and half damage from enemy spells simply via carrying it. This means most wands have double or triple the duration, +4 or +5 rings are easy to create, and most chargeable tools get infinite uses. Their skill tree allows them to attain Skilled level or better in weapon classes associated with the more powerful artifacts; the scroll of magic mapping, which they start the game with a few of, is most useful in traversing Gehennom; and the starting shirt can easily be enchanted for a lightweight source of high AC.

Valkyrie
"Valkyries are hardy warrior women. Their upbringing in the harsh Northlands makes them strong, inures them to extremes of cold, and instills in them stealth and cunning."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * An Ice Person/Kill It with Ice: Valkyries have innate cold resistance and can walk over icy terrain without slipping. The cone of cold is their special spell.
 * Character Alignment: Valkyries can be Lawful or Neutral.
 * Drop the Hammer: One of three roles that can attain Expert in hammer. Mjolnir is also their first guaranteed sacrifice gift.
 * Heroes Prefer Swords: Valkyries start with a long sword.
 * Norse Mythology: But of course. The Norn is their quest leader, their nemesis is Lord Surtur, and their pantheon consists of Tyr, Odin and Loki. Their quest artifact, the Orb of Fate, is also personally signed by Odin.
 * One-Gender Role: Valkyries are always female by default.

Wizard
"Wizards start out with a knowledge of magic, a selection of magical items, and a particular affinity for dweomercraft. Although seemingly weak and easy to overcome at first sight, an experienced Wizard is a deadly foe."

- A Guide to the Mazes of Menace: Guidebook for NetHack


 * Character Alignment: Wizards can be neutral or chaotic.
 * Egyptian Mythology: Their pantheon consists of Ptah, Thoth, and Anhur.
 * Magic Missile: Their special spell, and easily the most damaging spell in the game in their hands.
 * Robe and Wizard Hat: The starting cloak of magic resistance acts as the former, though you can still find a "proper" robe, and the latter appears as a "cornuthaum", an item that only Wizards benefit from wearing.
 * Simple Staff: Wizards start with one.
 * Weak but Skilled: Wizards that can get around their low combat prowess and lack of armor in the early game can gain access to destructively powerful magic.

=Character Alignment= The game allows player characters to be one of three alignments: Lawful, Neutral, and Chaotic. There is no good/neutral/evil axis as such - the game instead tracks players' "alignment record", which in essence is an indicator of one's standing with their respective god, and the alignments function more as a barometer of Order Versus Chaos. While the gods themselves and their pantheons are fairly interchangeable in terms of gameplay, each alignment's god has their own expected code of conduct from the player, albeit a fairly loose one. Humans can be of any alignment, while the other playable races are exclusive to one of the three, restricting the amount of role-race-alignment combos possible.

Despite Nearly Everything Trying to Kill You, monsters also have alignment ratings that determine many things, such as the type of nasties an Enemy Summoner can produce and which monsters can potentially spawn as peaceful towards you. The most unambiguously evil characters by this standard are the "unaligned" and their servants - the rest is very much a matter of perspective.

Artifact weapons are also given alignments as well, determining which ones a given character can use and receive; they can also be "non-aligned", meaning that they have no particular alignment bias and characters of any alignment can safely wield them. For artifacts that serve as quest objectives and sacrifice gifts, their alignment will be adjusted to match that of the recipient.

Lawful
The lawful alignment is as close to a traditional fantasy hero as you'll get in terms of alignment, and most lawful roles often have an accompanying set of standards that reflect this. Despite this, lawful characters are still capable of a surprising amount of tricks that even a lawful god wouldn't be disapproving of... Player character dwarves are exclusively lawful.


 * Excalibur:
 * Good Feels Good: Lawful characters get alignment bonuses for healing peaceful or tame monsters and untrapping others.
 * Holy Burns Evil: Inverted; lawful characters take damage if they quaff unholy water, and restore HP if they quaff holy water.
 * Light Is Good: Sacrifices from lawful characters disappear in flashes of light instead of a burst of flame, serving as an unintentional Bowdlerisation of sorts.
 * Sunsword is a lawful long sword that doubles as a light source and deals bonus damage against undead.

Neutral
The neutral alignment is often associated with animals and elementals; neutral players are still expected to be generally decent people, but are not held to standards as stringent as those of lawful players and can play a little dirtier. Player character gnomes are exclusively neutral.

Roles that can be played as neutral include Archeologists, Barbarians, Cavemen, Valkyries, and Wizards.

Chaotic
The chaotic alignment is as close to "evil" as a player can get in the base game, but is ultimately not portrayed as such - at least not explicitly. They are still expected to be nominally good, or at least not chaotic to the point where it starts causing problems. Player character orcs and elves are exclusively chaotic.


 * Always Chaotic Evil: Subverted due to the player character potentially being chaotic, and also due to the Order Versus Chaos underpinning of the alignment system; as mentioned before, "unaligned" monsters are most likely to fit that bill.
 * Bad Is Good and Good Is Bad: Chaotic players and monsters exhibit many characteristics consistent with this.
 * Even Chaotics Have Standards: Chaotic characters have the loosest set of alignment standards, but are still expected to behave, even if only out of sheer pragmatism (e.g. they don't get penalized for murder, but can still lose a lot of alignment from indiscriminately killing peacefuls). The chaotic gods and many of their servants also still oppose the Wizard of Yendor and Moloch on principle.
 * Evil Feels Good: Chaotic player characters are the only ones allowed (if not encouraged!) to perform same-race sacrifice, and gain alignment and possibly even Luck from it.
 * Fire and Brimstone Hell: Gehennom fits many of the hallmarks, and monster generation is heavily skewed towards chaotic monsters.
 * Holy Burns Evil: Chaotic characters take damage if they quaff holy water, and restore HP if they quaff unholy water. All forms of undead, all werecreatures and a majority of demons have a chaotic monster alignment, and many still retain their traditional weaknesses (e.g. demons and undead take bonus damage from blessed weapons, and all demons, werecreatures and vampires are weak to silver).
 * Our Elves Are Better: All elves in the game are chaotic.
 * Our Werebeasts Are Different: All were creatures are rated as chaotic.

Unaligned
In NetHack, only four gods lack an alignment: Marduk, Moloch, Arioch and Elbereth. In gameplay terms, the "unaligned" alignment is only attributed to Moloch, his priests and the Wizard of Yendor; in practice, this marks them as unambiguously Chaotic Evil, since almost all unaligned entities serve as antagonists. As mentioned before, there are also non-aligned artifacts that can be given to any player as a sacrifice gift.


 * Always Chaotic Evil: The only exception among them is the priest of Moloch in the Valley of the Dead, who functions like any other peaceful 'aligned' priest.
 * Blue and Orange Morality: To a degree with Moloch; he is the enemy of all three alignments' gods, and doesn't seem to care much for anyone except his priests (and in some cases not even then).
 * The Wizard of Yendor himself is an antagonist to the player no matter their alignment, and seems to have no trouble with Moloch or his servants while making his home in Gehennom.