Name one legitimately morally wrong thing that Fortuna did in his lifetime.
Name one legitimately morally wrong thing that Fortuna did in his lifetime
I can't, in that setting everyone reincarnates so it doesn't matter, and getting genocided by a mad necromancer is also a learning experience for the soul.
The DM was just asshurt about his metagame attempts.
Koko was arguably trying to commit the universe's first true murder, if she had succeeded in destroying Fortuna's soul.
And really, even if Fortuna was actually "killing" in the way that it's understood in this world, his motive was still rock solid.
How about killing thousands of people, not for the greater good, but because he wanted to power his creation.
How do you still manage to get his motive wrong when it's in the OP post?
Their deaths were the consequence of their civilization's greed.
They would just move across the river of souls again geez, at mots it's like ruining a kid's park and making them look for another.
Technically they were conquered by a more advanced civilization (composed solely of Fortuna).
To be fair, even if reincarnation were known to exist murder would still be a crime. People wouldn't want Fortuna murdering for the exact same reason that Fortuna didn't want East to die.
He betrayed his waifu and ruined her smile. You just don't fucking do that even if you know how to become God and can therefore rewrite everything how you want it to be.
Who was his waifu anyway? Koko? Rune? Rei?
But his "crimes" were done to SAVE his husbando and protect his daughteru's smile
Koko. That should have been pretty obvious really.
>husbando
That's his (future past) son you sick fuck.
If it's not morally wrong to have people die/murdered simply for them to enter the cycle of reincarnation is the act of binding Easts' soul bad?
I can't remember, is "Koko-chan" what she calls Kouko or did she just straight-up say that she wants Fortuna and Koko to fuck?
Not really, at least no divine entity ever condemns it. They just say that the spirit circle is way too advanced a tool for a mortal and that Fortuna wasn't supposed to be smart enough to make it.
So technically he didn't do anything wrong, but it's probably because there was no precedent of something like this going so far off the rails of the gods' plans. What got them to intervene was what could eventually happen in a supracosmic level if Fortune went unchecked.
So pretty much the whole story was the pantheon going worried_laugher.gif
I never got the "baww he's not alive" nonsense. To me it seemed like Fortuna just invented his era's equivalent to transhumanism.
You still kill people. People reincarnating doesn't matter most of the time since the continuity is not apparent to the soul itself
Strictly speaking the only things that can really be considered "bad" are the ones that cause Spascifica to show up or cause his higher-ups to stick you through multiple reincarnations till you learn your fucking place.
Flipping through chapters, it's pretty consistent with Rune calling her Koko.
>the entire SC multiverse is just those gods in the end playing an infinite number of D&D games simultaneously
That analogy is actually hilariously appropriate.
If intentions were all that mattered then we wouldn't have so many different schools of thought on the subject of morality. That said, the golden rule is a pretty simple way to gauge whether an action is moral though. If you don't mind being turned into a skeleton and enslaved in death so you can have your eternal soul turned to mush for one man's ego then sure, Fortuna did nothing wrong in your eyes.
Spacifica's attempt at damage control made the gods look like complete doormats, it was great.
>"Fortuna pls stop"
>"No"
>"Fuggg"
>Waits for several reincarnations to see if he mellows out in the process then tries again
>"FORTUNA PLS"
>"What, you want me to murder billions of people in the towers? Well I guess so"
>"FUGGG"
Then they give up and decide that the only one who can defeat Fortuna is Fortuna himself x7 + a gimmick weapon
>It still almost fails
Probably didn't want to ruin the campaign if they go OOC on the board. I mean at worst they'd get a new GM for their next session.
They gods clearly don't give a shit since they can just keep making you reincarnate until it all plays out how they want too. It's honestly fucking brilliant; messing with someone to that level should honestly be treated as a form of fucking torture. It was also kinda interesting that despite how intense the situation with Fortuna got they only had to go through a few reincarnations compared to the guys who were getting 49+.Then again, they were literally their own self-inserts so I guess they were just throwing them a bone.
In the other absolute madmen cases they did their megalomaniac shit, things resolved themselves and THEN went through a series of "punishment reincarnations" like Biscuit Hammer and Sengoku Youko's villains. Fortuna was like a cockroach who just kept on going and needed direct intervention.
The golden rule is a joke.
>I don't like people consuming resources and opportunities that I could have eventually utilized, therefore I should kill myself for the sake of helping others.
Also clearly cared about intentions enough to make an (incorrect) post about Fortuna's intentions in the first place.
>>I don't like people consuming resources and opportunities that I could have eventually utilized, therefore I should kill myself for the sake of helping others.
You're making the assumption that you must do something because it's moral.
The Golden Rule tells you whether or not you should consider an act moral. Actually carrying the act out is independent of it being moral or not.
I didn't actually make that assumption.
>should
The fundamental issue with the golden rule is that it's so subjective that it could easily become danger. It doesn't even attempt to take into account the wants or well-being of others, it just tells you to indulge your own desires indirectly through others.