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Moral Alignment

Discover your D&D moral alignment across the Law-Chaos and Good-Evil spectrum

Questions
12
Duration
3 min
Grid
3×3 Grid

Why It Matters

Moral values drive behavior more than any other factor in conflict and cooperation

Understanding your alignment helps you choose compatible partners and roles

Misaligned values between team members predict 60%+ of team conflicts

What You'll Discover

• Your alignment across the Law-Chaos axis (rule orientation)

• Your alignment across the Good-Evil axis (moral orientation)

• Your 9-box alignment type with description

• How your alignment predicts your decision-making

• Compatible and clashing alignments for partners and teams

Frequently Asked Questions

What is D&D alignment?

D&D alignment (Dungeons & Dragons) is a 9-box framework showing how characters relate to Law/Chaos (rule orientation) and Good/Evil (moral orientation). It's used to describe ethical systems: Lawful Good protects the innocent through rules; Chaotic Good breaks unjust rules to help people; Neutral Evil follows self-interest above all.

Is this actually useful outside of games?

Yes. While created for fantasy gaming, the alignment framework reveals real moral patterns. It's less about clinical ethics and more about how you balance rules, freedom, self-interest, and compassion in real decisions.

What does Neutral Neutral mean?

Neutral Neutral individuals operate without strong commitments to rules or morality. They focus on balance, self-interest, or transcendence above ideology. In practice, they're pragmatists or philosophers depending on context.

Can alignment change?

Yes. Major life events, relationships, and values shifts move people across the alignment chart. Many people have different alignments in different life areas (work vs family, for example).

What's the most common alignment?

Lawful Good (rules + morality) and Neutral Good (flexibility + morality) are most common in reality. Chaotic Evil is rarest. Most people gravitate toward good, with variation in how rule-bound vs flexible they are.

Related Assessments

What's your moral alignment?

Discover Your Alignment