8,218
edits
prefix>Import Bot (Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.NeutralGood 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.NeutralGood, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license) |
HLIAA14YOG (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
(25 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{trope}}
{{quote|''"I would unite with anybody to do right and with nobody to do wrong."''
|'''Frederick Douglass'''}}
The [[Character Alignment]] of sweetness and light. A
Their are different kinds of Neutral Goodness:
A
A
One of the differences between [[Lawful Good]] and
However, before you all run up to this alignment expecting it to hand out unconditional love and [[The Cake Is a Lie|free cake]] a small word of [[Beware the Nice Ones|caution]]: if this alignment is combined with [[Good Is Not Soft|Good Is Not
If you have a difficulty deciding which alignment a good-aligned character belongs to,
* Even though there are some situations where they can't always use this method, [[Lawful Good]] characters believe the best way is to have a specific, strict code of conduct, whether self-imposed or codified as a law. Their first impulse when making a moral decision is to refer back to this code; those with externally imposed systems (codes of laws, hierarchies, etc.) will try to work within the system when those systems go wrong. Depending on whether they are more Lawful or more Good, they will either refuse to break the code even though it would hurt someone, or else break it only very reluctantly, and only when it would hurt someone if they kept their code. [[Lawful Good]] characters have to be very good at [[Taking a Third Option]].
*
* Most [[Chaotic Good]] characters don't constantly break the law, but they cannot see much value in laws (or, for weaker-
* [[Superhero
* [[Badass Pacifist]]
* [[The Heart]]
Line 38 ⟶ 39:
* Many [[Shonen]] protagonists, if they're not [[Chaotic Good]] or [[Lawful Good]].
* The "[[The Kirk|ego]]" in a good-aligned [[Freudian Trio]].(At least is less lawful than the [[The Spock|"superego" character]] and more lawful than the [[The McCoy|"id" character]])
* Many [[Guile Hero
* [[Great White Hunter]]
* [[Knight in Shining Armor]], if not [[Lawful Good]]
Others, such as the [[Ideal Hero]], [[The Messiah]], and [[Friend to All Living Things]], can vary between [[Lawful Good]],
{{noreallife|this is a trope about how characters are depicted in media. Real people are far more complex than fictional characters, and cannot be pigeonholed this way. (For that matter, many if not most fictional characters cannot be pigeonholed this way, either; see below for the standards on whether to use this trope at all.}}
{{examples|Examples}}▼
'''When dealing with the examples of specific characters, remember that assigning an alignment to a character who doesn't come with one is pretty [[Subjective Tropes|subjective]]. If you've got a problem with a character being listed here, it probably belongs on the discussion page. There will be no [[Real Life]] examples under any circumstances; it just invites an [[Edit War]].'''▼
'''On works pages: Character Alignment is only to be used in works where it is canonical, and only for characters who have alignments in-story. There is to be no arguing over canonical alignments, and no Real Life examples, ever.'''▼
▲'''When dealing with the examples of specific characters, remember that assigning an alignment to a character who doesn't come with one is
▲'''On works pages: Character Alignment is only to be used in works where it is canonical, ''and only for characters who have alignments in-story''. There is to be no arguing over canonical alignments, and no Real Life examples, ever.'''
== Anime and Manga ==
* [[Shaman King|Yoh]] Asakura is definitely one, more concern about saving people who were trying to kill him than killing them, and his neutral outlook on things infuriate the [[Light Is Not Good|X Laws]] who believe themselves to be [[Lawful Good]].
* [[Yamato Nadeshiko|Kasumi Tendo]] of ''[[Ranma
* [[Magical Girlfriend|Belldandy]] of ''[[Ah
* Jim Hawkings of ''[[Outlaw Star]]''. Despite his age, he's the most mature and responsible member of the group, being the one who handles all of the cash, finds jobs for them, pays the bills and otherwise devotes himself to the exasperating task of organizing and caring for [[Chaotic Neutral]] slacker Gene Starwind. What keeps him from being [[Lawful Good]] is the fact he's a [[Child Prodigy]] hacker who often uses his code-breaking skills in less than legal ways. Melfina is probably also an example of this.
* Nagisa Misumi and Honoka Yukishiro from ''[[Futari wa Pretty Cure]]'', despite their vastly different personalities, quite probably share this alignment. Thus proving that alignment is only a ''part'' of characterization, not characterization itself.
** The same applies to seemingly all of [[Futari wa Pretty Cure Splash Star|their]] [[Yes!
* Mai Tokiha and Arika Yumemiya, main characters of, respectively, ''[[
* Of course, [[Gundam]] has characters in this alignment.
** [[Mobile Suit Gundam: The 08th MS Team|Shiro Amada]] is perfectly willing to violate the common sense of war and the military rules to save the lives of everyone including even his enemies from death in battlefields.
** Rain Mikamura and George D'Sand from [[G Gundam]], although both started as [[Lawful Good]].
** Post [[Character Development]] Quatre Rebarba Winner from [[Gundam Wing]].
** Kira Yamato from ''[[Gundam Seed]]'', particularly after he becomes an [[The Messiah|almost saintly]] [[Martial Pacifist]]. In the same series, Murrue Ramius. She recognizes the value of the law and tries to abide by it as much as she can, but follows her own conscience first, even if it means breaking laws or military regulations in the name of the greater good. Also, Lacus Clyne.
** Allelujah Haptism from [[Mobile Suit Gundam 00]]. Most of his teammates in the formerly [[Necessarily Evil]] organization Celestial Being shifted to this alignment in season 2.
** From ''[[Gundam AGE]]'', Grodek Ainoa, the captain of the battleship Diva, surprisingly falls into this alignment rather than [[Lawful Good]]. His [[To Be Lawful or Good|going against the incompetent federal authority]] in rescuing the civilians from a fallen colony [[Jumping Off the Slippery Slope|immediately strips him of the lawful status]]. {{spoiler|However, he descends into a [[True Neutral]] in Episode 15.}}
*** -- And of course, Flit Asuno {{spoiler|-- [[Jumping Off the Slippery Slope|or...]] [[True Neutral|at least, this is what he starts as...]]}}
Line 68 ⟶ 71:
* Hime Utsumiya, the [[The Messiah|messianic]], redheaded [[Tsundere]] from ''[[Brain Powerd]]''. She respects the orders of his superiors and has no problem with authority, unlike [[Chaotic Good]] Yuu. Still, her main concern is saving the world and protecting people, and would much rather talk with the Reclaimers than fight them. Actually, most people from Novice Noah fit this alignment.
* Sailor Moon and the Inner Sailor Senshi from ''[[Sailor Moon]]'' are pretty much the definition of this trope. They fight to protect everyone in the name of love and justice and also try to redeem the villains they battle whenever they get the chance. The [[Lawful Neutral|Outer Senshi]], not so much.
* Touta Matsuda from ''[[
* Kirk Caxstone from ''[[Black Lagoon]]''. Yes. ''[[Black Lagoon]]''. Some of the few character in there you can get symphatetic with. Sure, he would [[Punch Clock Hero|gladly take any order]] for his [[Eagle Land|country,]] but he's a [[The Captain|rather good, inspiring leader,]] and [[Establishing Character Moment|he would never, never harm innocents or letting innocents (especially children) get screwed up]] and ready to take any consequences for that. {{spoiler|And he's willing enough to trust a gun to a vengeful child whose father he had been killed in a duty.}}
* Jushiro Ukitake and Shunsui Kyoraku of ''[[Bleach]]''. While they are willing to detain the intruders who are trying to save Rukia (but not kill them), Ukitake tries to appeal to stop Rukia's execution, and when that fails, he and Kyoraku destroy the Sokyoku. The two of them believe that occasionally, people have to carry out justice on their own.
** Retsu Unohana as well, going by her willingness to heal any injured people she and her lieutenant come across, including those technically on the other side, and exiles from Soul Society, the Visored. ''Somehow'' the first three mentioned here all had [[Knight Templar]] Yamamoto as their mentor.
** Yoruichi is also of this alignment, though she used to be [[Lawful Good]] in the backstory.
** You could also probably argue that many of the human character fall here. Orihime and Chad certainly do, considering the overarching motivation of both is helping people. Ichigo vacillates between this and [[Chaotic Good]], as does Tatsuki and maybe Karin. Ishida tries to be [[Lawful Neutral]] but isn't very good at it; he goes between [[Lawful Good]] and
* Negi Springfield from ''[[Mahou Sensei Negima]]'', a cute ten-year-old [[Chick Magnet]] and descendant of an exceptionally powerful wizard who's devoted to protecting all of his 31 students (who all happen to be cute in their own special way). While he generally tries to act a proper <s> English</s> Welsh gentleman, he consistently defies orders even if given direct orders to stop one of his student's [[
* Dr. Tenma of ''[[Monster (
* Kakashi in ''[[Naruto]]'' believes that breaking rules is bad, but not helping those close to you is worse, and tests all his potential students to see if they will disobey orders in order to help each other. He puts this into practice when, rather than immediately going off to his next mission as Tsunade orders, goes to find Sasuke. In Kakashi Gaiden, it?s noted that he started off as more [[Lawful Neutral]], as a result of his father being ostracized for failing a mission, to save his friends- even by '''said friends'''- and committing suicide, but the
** A good portion of the rising generation of ninjas is like this, as they typically abide by the rules, but are willing to disobey orders in order to accomplish what they consider important or help those they care about.
* Rushuna, of ''[[Grenadier]]'', a massive [[Technical Pacifist]] who primarily uses the tactic of either [[The Power of Love|smiling sweetly]] or [[Blasting It Out of Their Hands]].
Line 83 ⟶ 86:
** All of the main characters end up in this neighborhood in the latter portion of the series, even if early chapters seemed to indicate otherwise, but Kurogane gets bonus points for keeping the most basic aspects of his personality unchanged from the beginning.
* Jiro "Roji" Kusano of Muhyo and Roji tends to often object to some of the [[Lawful Good]] Muhyo's harsher decisions that stem more from his Lawful side (like sending Nana's father to the Styx), until he realizes the motives behind them, and occasionally acts on his own.
* [[
** His first son, Gohan, takes after him, becoming the single kindest character in DBZ ([[Beware the Nice Ones|unless]] [[Dark Messiah|he]] [[Super
** [[The Krillin|Krillin]] also seems to be quite a bit influenced by Goku's kindness.
* [[Hajime no Ippo|Ippo]] is so polite, nice and well-meaning that it almost hurts sometimes, feeling sympathy to almost all of his opponents. That said, his devotion to winning even during the toughest of odds leaves him to do whatever it takes, but he still is extremely polite to his opponents even after they lose.
* [[Liar Game|Nao Kanzaki]] is about as Neutral Good as it gets - yes, she'll trick people, but only if they don't trust her enough to believe that she's really looking out for them. And she is - she pays off all her opponents' debts after beating them, even though this will almost certainly leave her with an unpayable (in the 'billions of yen' range) debt at the [[Dark Tournament|Liar Game Tournament's]] end.
* Alphonse Elric from ''[[Fullmetal Alchemist (manga)|Fullmetal Alchemist]]'' is definitely Neutral Good, conscience-driven and kind. His brother Edward is [[Chaotic Good]].
** Winry is also Neutral Good.
* Gintoki from ''Gintama'' fits in this alignment. Usually, he is a useless lazy bum who is happy to go along with rules. However, he won't hesitate to break all rules and throw himself in fire when it comes to protecting those he cares about, whether it is his [[True Companions]] in danger or a child Gintoki promised to reunite with his mother.
* Xing-ke of ''[[
* This describes Onizuka-sensei of Great Teacher Onizuka under D&D rules. Despite the fact He may be stupid, selfish, greedy, a and '''the furthest thing''' from being a mature, responsible teacher, but he'd do anything for his students. He sits here because he isn't particularly Chaotic or Lawful.
* Kinomoto Sakura from''[[
* Pip Bernadette of ''[[Hellsing]]''.
* Misato Katsuragi of ''[[
* [[Anti
* Miroku, Kagome and Shippo of [[Inuyasha]].
* ''[[Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha]]'': Nanoha probably fits best here. She prefers to work within the system when possible, but she will [[Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right|disobey orders that she thinks are morally objectionable]].
* China and Taiwan from ''[[Axis Powers Hetalia
** Also Vietnam and Thailand. Viet is the [[Cool Big Sis]] of the Asians, while Thailand is very much a [[Nice Guy]] but it seems he may not be above tricking people to get what he wants and needs.
** Lithuania, Canada and Finland, too. They all seem to be among [[Nice Guy|the most genuinely nice]] members of the
** Iceland starts as [[True Neutral]], but after the [[Hetalia
** North Italy and Spain gear towards this alignment too, contrasting with [[Lawful Neutral]] Germany and [[Chaotic Good]] Romano.
** Belgium, as the [[Cool Big Sis]] of the Benelux, fits here too and offers contrast with Romano and her [[Chaotic Neutral]] brother, the Netherlands.
** Monaco seems to be [[Lawful Good]] as it befits a [[Non Royal Princess]], but her love of gambling may put her here.
== Comic Books ==
* [[Wonder Woman]] is arguably this, as she tends to be able to break rules (her own and those of society) when the situation calls for it but also doesn't needlessly break them (she is an ambassador to Man's World, after all).
* ''[[Civil War (Comic Book)|Civil War]]'' more or less locked [[Captain America (comics)]] into Neutral Good, though some would still argue he's [[Lawful Good]]. Considering that he has twice given up his name because he disagreed with the actions of the American government, there's definitely an argument that he's been
* [[Spider-Man]] alternates between this and [[Chaotic Good]]. What sets him most into this area is his motivation: he's a good guy because his Uncle Ben would have wanted him to be a good guy. He's not battling injustice or upholding the law; he's doing the right thing for the sake of doing the right thing.
* The [[
* While often portrayed as [[Lawful Good]], [[Superman]] can sometimes be this, especially in recent comics. While he tries to maintain good relations with the Law, he isn't above going against the letter of the law if he feels it is the right thing to do. (The storyline "Last Son" comes to mind, where he rescues a Kryptonian boy... by smashing up an armoured government transport. He knew where the boy was by attacking a secure government location and ''making'' them tell him. See?
* [[Batman|Tim Drake]] initially came off as this when he became the third Robin. Although he had lost his mother to a criminal (who also severely injured his father), revenge and punishment has never been his motivation. He became Robin because Batman ''needed'' a Robin to save him from his own darkness. Jason Todd had been dead for several years now, Dick Grayson was firmly established as [[Nightwing]], and he was the only one with the skills and motivation to fill the void. Tim is one of the few people who Batman feels will eventually surpass his teachings and actually improve on his crimefightng methods. The other is Dick Grayson himself, who also falls into this alignment.
* [[
* Boy Blue from ''[[Fables]]''. He generally lived by Fabletown's laws, but when he found out his lost love might be alive, he stole the most powerful magical artifacts in town and went off after her.
* This seems to be the default alignment for members of the [[Batman|Bat-Family]]. Dick Grayson, Barbara Gordon, and Tim Drake all potentially qualify, motivated most by a desire to help people. Some, though, tend to veer off elsewhere, as with [[Lawful Good]] Cassandra Cain, [[Chaotic Good]] Stephanie Brown, [[Chaotic Neutral]] post-[[Face Heel Turn]] Jason Todd, and [[True Neutral]] / [[Chaotic Neutral]] Damien Wayne, and these ones tend to be noticeably more arms-length (and, [[Unfortunate Implications|coincidentally,]] are all the offspring of villains). Bats himself swings all over the Alignment scale ([[Depending
* [[Doctor Strange]] is this with shadings of [[Lawful Good]]. He has to work within rules and laws, but they're the rules and laws of magical and often alien worlds, and he frequently resorts to [[Guile Hero]] mode to make them work ''for'' him.
* The [[Flash]] family covers the whole "Good" alignment axis, with Wally West holding down the Neutral Good fort. Wally's got one of the least complicated origin stories of his generation of
Line 126 ⟶ 129:
** Luke Skywalker. What else can you say about a guy who was [[Tyke Bomb|effectively turned into a weapon aimed at the Empire]]... who then [[The Power of Love|won the crucial battle with love?]]
** From the prequel movies, Qui-Gon Jinn. Given what happened later, the Jedi Council [[Ignored Expert|probably should have listened to him a bit more]].
** Anakin viewed himself as this, willing to do good even if it put him in conflict with the rest of the Jedi. However, his self-perception and his reality may have been very different, as he had strong aspects of [[Chaotic Good]]. This was particularly evident in his tendency to question Obi-Wan's decisions, to say nothing of the Jedi Council's, as well as ignoring the rules of the order much of the time. Palpatine's [[Mirror Morality Machine|offer of the secret to preventing death]] resulted in Anakin doing whatever it took to get it. [[Lawful Evil|And we all know how
** Although there will always be some question about whether he was
* The Dude from ''[[The Big Lebowski]]'', whenever he gets the motivation to do anything. He's way too laid back to want to enforce or tear down society's laws.
* Axel Foley from ''[[Beverly Hills Cop]]''. A policeman, but one who often does not go by the book, and even breaks the law in the interests of what's right in the long run.
* Will Turner from ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean]]''. He really would like to be [[Lawful Good]], and he does his best at it, but...well, piracy is [[In the Blood]].
* The eponymous heroine of ''[[Amelie]]'', who pretty much makes being altruistic and bringing happiness to people around her the point of her daily life - within the rules if possible, but (mildly) breaking them if need be.
* Mr. Miyagi from [[The Karate Kid]] is the utterly perfect [[Cool Old Guy]] example. He is an incredibly skilled martial artist, and kind teacher but wouldn't harm a fly (figuratively speaking) [[Martial Pacifist|other than in the sake of defense of himself or another.]]
* The eponymous [[The Goonies
* In the ''[[
** Lora is the one convincing [[Lawful Good|Alan]] that they should warn [[Chaotic Good|Flynn]] about Dillinger.
** Roy is a quiet, unassuming guy who ends up being the primary motivator behind "Flynn Lives." He'll exhaust the legal and proper methods, and then get into the computer hacking.
** In a deleted scene, Yori pulls off a highly-illegal power transfer just to give her "husband" a properly sexy welcome home, but otherwise is [[The Engineer|a simulation debugger]].
** Ram's not as driven to destroy Master Control as he just wants to get back to his job calculating insurance rates. {{spoiler|Even when he's de-rezzing}}, he's more focused on [[The Power of Friendship]] than anything else.
** Quorra in ''[[Tron
** In the [[Alternate Continuity]] of [[
== Literature ==
* Fat Charlie from ''[[
* Gandalf from ''[[The Lord of the Rings
**Or not. Gandalf is the Ambassador of the Valar. He takes orders from Manwe and from Eru. No one expects the envoy from one prince to take orders from another.
* ''[[Harry Potter (
* Lu-Tze of ''[[
* In ''[[The Malloreon]]'', Belgarion walks the fine line between [[Lawful Good]] and
* Somewhere between "Literature" and "Comics", there are the protagonists of the [[X Wing Series]]. Wedge Antilles might seem [[Lawful Good]] but will disobey orders, frequently [[Fake Static|faking interference]], if he sees the need. He's a [[Mildly Military|Mildly]] [[Military Maverick]] who gets enough success that the New Republic loves him. He also leaves the New Republic when he finds that the Rogues can't get back at a traitor due to diplomatic immunity, and all of his subordinates follow.
{{quote|
'''[[Smug Snake|Fey'lya]]''': "It would appear, Captain Celchu, that Rogue Squadron is now your command."
'''Celchu''': "I don't think so. It's been a long time since I've been a civilian. I'm out as well." }}
* The ''[[
* [[The Messiah|Rand al'Thor]] of the ''[[Wheel of Time]]'', the hero capable of utilizing [[Order Versus Chaos|order or chaos]] to advance the side of right. He is ultimately devoted to "the Light" and spearheads the battle against the forces of the "Dark One." His overarching task through most of the series is to unite the various nations of the world under a single banner-his. He often acts as(and is seen as) a chaotic force, overthrowing established traditions and rules, being a usurper. However, when he gains control over a nation, be it by force or trickery, he quickly consolidates his power and brings the nation back under a lawful regime. His more lawful side is best demonstrated in ''Lord of Chaos'' when he {{spoiler|stresses to the Aiel not to loot the newly conquered kingdom of Caemlyn, saying he wants to avoid anarchy and keep everything nice and lawful until he can put a ruler of his choice on the throne to govern for him.}}
** The Big Three (male) heroes all seem to be linked to one of the goods, although there's a good deal of ambiguity. Perrin, despite his "simple blacksmith" protests, seems very fond of an ordered society, which dovetails in nicely with the pack mentality of his wold friends. Matt, of course, as the [[Loveable Rogue]], would be the representative of chaos in the group, although this gets tempered quite a bit as the series goes on.
* [[Badass Bookworm]] Mikael Blomkvist from [[The Millennium Trilogy]].
* The three protagonists of the [[Green
* In ''[[The Dresden Files]]'', Sanya, the Russian Knight Of The Cross, appears to be more ambivalent about following laws and order, and is more devoted to the simple act of rescuing innocents and fighting evil.
* Captain Kirk of ''[[Star Trek:
▲== Live Action TV ==
▲* Captain Kirk of ''[[Star Trek TOS]]'' has just enough respect for the Federation to not violate its laws unless he has a ''damn'' good reason, as he understands it's probably the best government out there.
** In his later days (in the movies, mayhaps) Spock tends to flow a bit in to this as well, actually allowing emotion in order to quell his internal conflicts.
* Miles O'Brien from ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' has no problems with orders and laws but will break or bend them for the greater good.
* Karl ("Helo") Agathon from ''[[Battlestar Galactica]]'', probably the most purely ''good'' character on the show. A strong case might be made for his being [[Lawful Good]], but his willingness to go beyond or disobey orders puts him more in the Neutral Good category.
* Shepherd Book and Simon Tam from ''[[Firefly (TV series)|Firefly]]''. Both seem to have a decent amount of respect for law and order, but have no problems breaking any law which endangers their friends or family.
** Also, Kaylee and Wash from the same show. Though they may have chaotic good leanings. They are just generally good, happy (for the most part) people who always try to do what they believe is right. They are also the two least violent people in the show making them [[Technical Pacifist]].
* Hercules, as depicted in ''[[Hercules: The Legendary Journeys]]''.
* ''[[
* In ''[[
* Some of [[
* ''[[
** Freddie started more like [[Lawful Good]], only to shift towards
* ''[[
** Hurley is another example of
* Both JD and Turk from ''[[
* Justin in ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]'', althought meant to be a by-the-book character, is a example of this.
* ''[[Chuck]]'': Well, Chuck. Placed in a very difficult situation, he works with the NSA and CIA in order to stop bad guys (I think he leans toward Lawful), but is completely devoted to his friends and family, and is willing to buck authority in order to do the right thing. Think of all the times he didn't stay in the car.
* Eiji Hino, aka [[Kamen Rider OOO]], helps anyone he comes across and has no plans for the future. At the same time, he accepts long-term contracts with enthusiasm if they will help him help others.
Line 183 ⟶ 186:
== Tabletop Games ==
* Needless to say, as the [[Trope Namer]] and [[Trope Codifier]], ''[[Dungeons
** This is the most common alignment for [[Our Gnomes Are Weirder|gnomes]]. They are usually kindhearted and live in close-knit communities, but generally blanch at restrictive rules. They live in harmony with nature, which usually precludes a lawful or chaotic bias.
** Guardinals are a "race" of
** Also in ''[[Pathfinder]]'',
** Pelor, the sun god in the ''[[Greyhawk]]'' campaign setting, has a dual role as the protector of the meek and a crusader against evil without preference for order or chaos. Garl Glittergold, the god of the gnomes, is a watchful protector with a playful sense of humor.
** Saranrae, ''[[Pathfinder]]'''s sun goddess, fills a similar niche to Pelor's. Shelyn, the other major
* It's hard to believe that anyone in ''[[Warhammer
== Video Games ==
* Amaterasu from ''[[Okami]]'', who will even take time from saving the world to feed poor, hungry kittens and help an old lady dry her laundry. She has shades of [[Lawful Good]]
* [[Love Freak]] Flonne from ''[[Disgaea]]''. Just click the link for [[Love Freak]] already... it does the explaining for us.
** Artina from the 4th game, being the "medic that treats all" type. {{spoiler|As "Vulcanus, Thieving Angel" though, her actual alignment can be hard to get a bead on, as while she's still her old self underneath it all, she now charges money to demons for her services and steals, er, "repossesses" money from the Netherworld in the name of Celestia. However, it's mostly an act, as it was a Black Ops mission with the net objective of saving all three realms.}}
* ''[[Star Wars]] [[Knights of the Old Republic]]'' 1 and 2 give most of the senior Jedi this alignment. While it frees them to do as they think best, it can also leave them wondering what to do in a situation.
** Carth Onasi explains the difference between a warrior and a soldier: "Warriors attack and conquer, they prey on the weak. Soldiers defend and protect the innocent -- usually from warriors." Carth is [[Lawful Good]], but this spells out a
* [[Star
* Klonoa is pretty much the embodiement of
* Marona from ''[[Phantom Brave]]''. This ''should'' be especially hard for her to maintain since [[Untrusting Community|everyone she meets]] [[All of the Other Reindeer|tends to hate her by default]], but she manages to [[Pollyanna|keep up a happy face...somehow]].
* Most of the protagonists in ''[[Soul Nomad and The World Eaters]]'' are probably neutral good, helping people for their own sake and wanting to save the world for the good of all... Barring [[Token Evil Teammate|Gig]], of course, who'd rather [[Chaotic Evil|burn what's left down to the ground and do a funny little dance on the ashes]].
* Auron from ''[[Final Fantasy X]]'' is like this after rethinking his worldview after his pilgrimage with Braska {{spoiler|and his death}}, being willing to help protect Yuna regardless of what that requires. "We will protect Yuna from ''anyone'', even a Maester".
* Ramza from ''[[Final Fantasy Tactics]]'' is perhaps the purest example of this trope in [[Final Fantasy]], even more so because he lives in a [[World Half Empty]] where almost nobody else believes in honesty or honor. Even when he ''knows'' that [[No Good Deed Goes Unpunished]], he's still going to save his sister, stop the world from being destroyed...and do it without making any sacrifices or compromising himself.
* [http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i212/Kerrah_photos/NEUTRALGOOD.jpg Malfurion Stormrage] from ''[[
** [http://i73.photobucket.com/albums/i212/Kerrah_photos/NEUTRALGOOD-1.jpg Khadgar] from the [[Expanded Universe]], seems to have a very strong air of "I respect your order and ceremony, but can't be bothered for it myself" about himself. In the novel ''[[Tides of Darkness]]'', he arrives to the meeting of the leaders of [[The Magocracy]], cutting short their mysteriousness to get to the point and deliver the news that they're in danger and need to prepare. Even after he becomes a member of the very same council, he just mostly hangs on the other side of the world, building defences against the orcs.
** Also Jaina Proudmore, probably the only human leader who is interested in peace (or perhaps even alliance) between The Alliance and The Horde post-Warcraft 3.
** The ultimate example is probably Tirion Fordring, he went against his own masters to rescue an orc from execution. Later on he is paired with [[Chaotic Neutral]] (or perhaps [[Chaotic Good]]) Darion Mograine and his army of Death Knights.
** [[Shell
* Sanger Zonvolt and <s>Elzam von Branstein</s> Ratsel Feinschmeker from ''[[Super Robot Wars]] [[Original Generation]]''. They are not part of the Earth Federation Army officially, but will occasionally show up and help them. And when they do, they do it with obedience to the rules, and much [[Badass
** Masaki Andoh and the rest of the Elemental Lords (Yang Long, Tytti and Mio) also fit the bill. Technically, they abide to the laws of La Gias, but they are given the special permission to break the law if they see the law straying from its path. Masaki only uses it once and that's not out of whim and dislike towards law. In the Original Generation series, Masaki does follow the rules nicely, though he's not part of the official EFA (he tends to <s>wander</s> [[No Sense of Direction|get lost]] and be found nearby... and then tags along).
* Though he started off as arguably [[Lawful Good]] or [[Lawful Neutral]] in the ''[[Metal Gear]]'' series, by the end of ''[[Metal Gear Solid]]'', Snake has more or less given the entire U.S. Military and the world governments the bird in order to work on a personal mission he and Otacon share: The eradication of [[Mnogo Nukes|Metal]] [[Humongous Mecha|Gears]] and anti-nuclear proliferation, even if said activities would label him as a Terrorist. But if given the option, Snake would probably had used 'legal' means if they existed, so that puts him in the Neutral Good turf.
* Most of the heroes of ''[[
* In the prequel novel to ''[[Fate/stay
* Nowe, the "dragon-boy" from ''[[Drakengard]] 2'' and a more traditional hero in contrast with [[Heroic Sociopath]] Caim, has helping out his fellow men as his top priority. This view leads to him questioning whether the methods used by the Knights of the Seal are truly righteous after seeing the suffering of the Empire survivors... and finally, to him leaving the order and seeking a less extreme way of bettering the world.
* Balancing out the [[Chaotic Good]] [[Sonic the Hedgehog|Sonic]] and [[Lawful Good]] Knuckles, Miles 'Tails' Prower seems to embody Neutral Good the best among the [[Power Trio]]. He is noticeably more responsible than Sonic. He encourages most of the ideals of freedom Sonic lives for (unlike Knuckles, who frowns on Sonic's 'irresponsible' behaviour), and usually adheres to them, but will take the time to slow down.
Line 219 ⟶ 222:
* Jak from the ''[[Jak and Daxter]]'' games seems to start out like this. Then ''[[Darker and Edgier|Renegade]]'' [[Phlebotinum Rebel|happens]], pushing him temporarily to [[Chaotic Neutral]]... but thanks to the twin miracles of [[Character Development]] and [[The Power of Friendship]], he eventually swings back to a more mature version of Neutral Good.
* Most ''[[Suikoden]]'' characters fall into the Trifecta of Good Alignments, but Thomas from ''[[Suikoden III]]'' is without a doubt an excellent example of Neutral Good. He's a sweet-hearted guy who stands up for another person without even asking what's going on, and is primarily focused on creating a place where everyone can get along. The poor kid tends to lean towards [[Stupid Good]] at times.
* Being a [[Legacy Character]], [[The Legend of Zelda
* [[Super Mario Bros.|Mario and Luigi]] of the Mario series are Neutral Good, since the series does not focus too much on either Lawful or Chaotic aspects.
* Kathryn Akkaraju in ''[[Shogo
* Kasumi, from [[Dead or Alive]]. Despite her need for revenge in the first game, which caused her to be forced into exile, [[Technical Pacifist|she never tries to kill the ninjas that are sent after her.]] She's also one of the [[Nice Guy|nicest characters in the game.]]
* [[Ratchet and Clank|Ratchet]] is borderline
* Annie Frazier of ''[[Backyard Sports]]'', being a "friend to animals" and a [[Granola Girl]], fits this trope. Ricky Johnson from the same series does too.
* JC Denton could be considered this alignment in the original ''[[
{{quote|
* [[Terse Talker|Mordin]] [[Deadly Doctor|Solus]] of ''[[Mass Effect]] 2''. Has distinction of being Neutral Good [[Well
** To a lesser extent (and with more pronouns and articles) Commander Shepard, especially on the Paragon path. S/he routinely rejects laws that s/he finds to be immoral or unjust, while upholding those s/he views as necessary.
** Several of your other party members, such as [[The Engineer|Tali,]] [[Nice Guy|Jacob,]] and [[Hot Scientist|Liara]] could fit this alignment as well.
** Possibly one of the best examples of this alignment would be [[Hot Amazon|Ashley]]. She's ultimately on the side of good, but also somewhat [[Hot
* The Paladins in ''[[Quest for Glory]]''. Bluntly, the [[Karma Meter]] notion of Honor in the game is related to how much of a [[Nice Guy]] the hero is, and how in tune he is with the world's goodness. The way of the Paladin also explicitely states to break laws for the greater good. As Rakeesh puts it : "The way of the Paladin is to seek to know that which truly is. The Paladin strives to learn his own inner nature and that of others. The Paladin does whatever needs to be done to bring light to the world. Not for glory, not for gain, the Paladin Becomes a Paladin because it is his Will."
* The ''[[
** Jaheira, at least in the second game. The only reason the game labels her as [[True Neutral]] is because that's the only alignment 2nd edition Druids were allowed to have.
** Valygar is this as well, though he dips into a [[True Neutral]] mindset from time to time.
** Not to mention Imoen, the main character's primary [[Sidekick]]. It's hard to fairly describe her personality in a way that doesn't [[Lovable Rogue|make her sound]] [[Chaotic Good]], though.
* [[
* Daniel Vinyard, main protagonist of ''[[
** Of course, this is because (MAJOR spoiler) {{spoiler|He has had a spirit ,the Hand of Fate, summoned into him since before his birth to shape him into a leader to unite the various fragmented countries and end their petty infighting}}
* Dawn Star In ''[[Jade Empire]]'' - She is kind, shy, and VERY high up on the Open Palm side of the [[Karma Meter]]. She is first to cheer when your character does something selfless. She respects the law of nature, but the Empire? Not so much. {{spoiler|Yes, you CAN corrupt her when you play Closed Fist.}}
** From the same game, Henpecked Hou. Generally nice guy, doesn't much care one way or another about the forces of Order and Chaos, but finds Closed Fist actions pretty questionable.
* Recette Lemongrass from ''[[Recettear]]'' can easily be seen as this. She is generally well-liked by the local citizens of Pensee, and is easily one of the nicest people in the town. However, she is commonly rather irresponsible and doesn't even fill her own accountings (and really doesn't even [[Cloudcuckoolander|understand why they are nessecary]]), which Tear comments angrily upon at the end of the game when she finds out that all the pages in the book are blank. As to this, she's nowhere near responsible enough to be [[Lawful Good]], but is still far from reckless enough to be [[Chaotic Good]].
* Gabriel Belmont from ''[[Castlevania: Lords of Shadow]]'', though a [[Byronic Hero]] with a [[Selfish Good|selfish]] goal of his own. Unlike [[God of War|Kratos]], Gabriel has much good inside his heart, and is aware of the world corrupted by darkness. While carrying the duty as a Brotherhood of Light, he would not hesitate to do things outside the norm of the Brotherhood (such as {{spoiler|upgrading his whip with spikes}}) to bring back the light to the world, thank to the guidance of his dead childhood love, [[Victorious Childhood Friend|Marie]]. In spite of [[Hannibal Lecture|the villains constantly denouncing him as]] [[Not So Different]] from themselves, the only things he would ever kill are aggressive evil creatures.
{{quote|
* ''[[
** There's also [[Catgirl|Tao]][[The Ditz|kaka]], who has a genuinely kind heart and is equally willing to follow or break rules. Although, some of her actions and beliefs make her fall into [[Stupid Good]] territory sometimes, like {{spoiler|sparing Arakune even though he'll return and attempt to attack the village again}}.
** [[Little Bit Beastly|Mak]][[Ms. Fanservice|oto]] is definitely of this alignment. Like Litchi, she's kind, friendly, and doesn't have a genuinely malicious bone in her body. However, if you make the mistake of [[Berserk Button|threatening or harming]] [[True Companions|her friends]], she has [[Good Is Not Soft|no qualms about beating you into a mushy pulp]]. Also, {{spoiler|she works as a mole in the [[The Empire|NOL]] for [[La Résistance|Sector Seven]], although this more out of loyalty to her friends than anything else}}.
** Finally, there's [[Petting Zoo People|Ju]][[Badass|bei]], one of the legendary Six Heroes, Ragna's mentor and the strongest living thing on earth. However, unlike the previous entries, [[Good Is Not Nice|Jubei is a foul-mouthed and ill-tempered old]] [[Trickster Mentor]], but he [[Jerk
* [[Touhou]] has 2 characters that exemplifies
* ''[[Metroid]]'': Samus Aran probably falls here overall, as she has worked closely and obediently with the Galactic Federation in Prime 3 and most of Other M, but she's a Bounty Hunter so that she can be free to tell the Federation to sod off when they get evil, as was the case in the finales of Fusion or Other M.
* Leliana In ''[[Dragon Age]]: Origins'' will often dance between this and [[Chaotic Good]]. She's a born again follower of the of the Maker, and the Chantry. She believes in doing good as it is the Makers will. but she can't quite shake her roguish [[Chaotic Good]] or even [[Chaotic Neutral]] past. Whether she stays on the Neutral Good or goes back to her roguish lifestyle depends on the players actions and what is said to her through the course of the game. AKA whether or not she is hardened.
* In [[Dragon Age II]], Aveline's early [[Character Development]] transforms her in to this. She continues to uphold the law and is still very much by the book... it just skews a little when her friends are involved. She still berates them to no end, though.
* The world of [[Tekken]] may have taken a dive in [[Darker and Edgier]] turn. However, [[Gentle Giant|King]] [[Masked Luchador|II]] remains true to his personality as a orphanage owner, [[Friend to All Children]] and is still a generally positive [[Nice Guy]] who doesn't tolerate evil (in Scenario Campaigns, he clearly does not approve both Jin and Kazuya for their World War III attempts), and can be genuinely forgiving, even if you committed such a [[
* Despite most of his lines and values leaning towards [[Lawful Good]] Cole Phelps of [[
== Webcomics ==
* Sir James Eglamore from ''[[
* Agatha Heterodyne from ''[[
* Fighter of ''[[
* In ''[[The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob]],'' Bob runs into almost constant trouble with the government in the form of [[Men in Black (
* Julie, the protagonist of ''[[Our Little Adventure]]'' officially, but even her own group members think she's a bit too [[Lawful Good|uptight and a keener.]]
* Ruby of [[
* Sandra from ''[[
* Lee Free Sr. in ''[[Everyday Heroes]]'' balances out here. His motivation, defense of the little guy against the system is Chaotic Good but as a skilled and knowledgeable lawyer he uses the law
* Criminy in Sinfest. Jesus being here should be a no brainer. Fuschia started as [[Chaotic Evil]] but eventually moved to
== Web Original ==
* Penny of ''[[
* [[The Medic|Codex]] and [[Genki Girl|Clara]] from ''[[The Guild]]'' both seem to fit into this, or at least balance out Vork's [[Lawful Good]], Zaboo's [[Chaotic Good]], and the [[Neutral Evil]] of Tink and Tordek
== Western Animation ==
* Aang from ''[[Avatar: The Last Airbender]]'', complete with [[Friend to All Living Things]] and [[The Messiah]], not to mention going against the evil government. Avatars in general seem to be
** <s>[[Retired Badass|General]]</s> [[Cool Old Guy|Iroh]] is clearly
** After going through [[True Neutral|all]] [[Chaotic Neutral|neutral]] [[Lawful Neutral|alignments]] ([[Neutral Evil|except for one]]) during the series first, {{spoiler|Zuko seems to}} end up here. However, as the sequel book "The Promise" shows, he still struggles with working out what, exactly, counts as "good".
* [[The Messiah|Ren]], from ''The [[Pirates of Dark Water]]'', although he sometimes leans towards [[Lawful Good]] or even [[Stupid Good|just too damn nice for his own good]].
* The ''[[Justice League]]'' incarnation of the Flash. Apart from generally trying to help ''everyone'', whether they appreciate it or not, he has also managed to talk [[Good Is Not Nice|Batman]] out of using the [[Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique]] and got all the information they needed by having a friendly chat with the villain (and even got him to turn himself in!).
* [[Kid Appeal Character|Bumblebee]] from ''[[Transformers Animated]]''. He doesn't always follow orders from his superiors, but he is still consistently good. He has never disobeyed orders to do bad things (although he has done so to do [[Leeroy Jenkins|rash things]]).
** Most other [[Kid Appeal Character|Hot Rod/Hot Shots]] fall under this, or [[Chaotic Good]].
* [[The Simpsons (animation)|Lisa Simpson]] seems to fit here pretty well, due to her moral standards and her status as the [[Only Sane Man|Only Sane]] <s>[[Only Sane Man|Man]]</s> [[Only Sane Man|Woman]]. She tries to, and usually succeeds at following laws and rules that exist, but she is more than willing to break said rules when she believes it's the right thing to do. She's lacks the laid-back and the outright rebellious nature of Bart, but she is a bit too willing to break norms and traditions to be [[Lawful Good]].
* [[King of the Hill|Bobby Hill]] fits this alignment fairly well. Much of the comedy of the series comes from the tensions between him and his father [[Lawful Neutral|Hank]].
* Timmy Turner of ''[[The Fairly
* Robin from ''[[Teen Titans (
** Perhaps the truest representation in the main Titans Team is Beast Boy. Sometimes he can come off as [[Chaotic Good]], but that has more to do with his status as the team's [[Wacky Guy]]. When you get right down to his motivations he does what he does because it is ''right.''
* [[Only Sane Man|Stan]] [[The Everyman|Marsh]] from ''[[South Park]]''. While [[The Smart Guy|Kyle]]'s [[Chaotic Good]] , [[Fat Bastard|Cartman]]'s [[Neutral Evil]] (or [[Chaotic Neutral]] / [[Chaotic Evil]]) and [[The Quiet One|Kenny]]'s [[True Neutral]].
** Later season shift this a bit with Kyle actually being more of the
* ''[[Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers
* [[
* Clockwork from ''[[Danny Phantom]]''. He alternates between breaking the rules and following
* Most of the kids from [[Dungeons and Dragons (
* T.J. Detweiler from ''[[Recess]]'' is both this and [[Chaotic Good]].
* Fluttershy from ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Goodness Tropes]]
[[Category:Character Alignment]]
[[Category:Hedonism Tropes]]
Line 305 ⟶ 304:
[[Category:Flame Bait]]
[[Category:Neutral Good]]
[[Category:
|