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Black-and-White Morality
- 221 statements
- 41 feature instances
- 546 referencing feature instances
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Black-and-White Morality | comment |
Good versus Evil. White hat versus black hat. The shining knight of light and destiny with flowing cape versus the dark mustache-twirling, card-carrying force of pure malevolence. The Republic, The Alliance, The Federation and/or La Résistance, fighting for freedom and happiness, helping the helpless, and running soup kitchens, versus the Evil Empire of oppression and tyranny run by The Legions of Hell, greedy corporate scumbags, and an Evil Overlord with a Decadent Court. The Incorruptible Pure Pureness versus the Complete Monster. The most basic form of fictional morality, Black And White Morality deals with the battle between pure good and absolute evil. This can come in a variety of forms: Motivation: The villains never have a sympathetic motivation for their actions. There aren't any Well-Intentioned Extremists, and The Mole will show his true colors once he's unmasked. Rather, their intentions are entirely for the sake of Evil (and may involve taking over or destroying the world). Likewise, the forces of good never have any evil, ulterior motives for their deeds, as they do good because it's The Right Thing To Do. Choices: All major choices that the heroes are faced with are either unambiguously right or wrong. There are no real grey areas at all, and when a Sadistic Choice is presented, there's always a third option. Furthermore, the heroes will always make the right choice, unless they're about to learn An Aesop or pull a Face–Heel Turn. Characterization: The good guys are good, and the bad guys are bad. If there are any morally ambiguous or grey characters around (such as an Anti-Hero or Worthy Opponent), they will often eventually shift firmly to one side or the other. They'll either switch to the side that matches their actual perceived alignment or turn fully good or fully evil. Minor characters may maintain some degree of neutrality, but the major characters will all be on one side or the other. Occasionally there will be a short scene explaining the neutrality is inherently evil (or, very rarely, good). To avoid an Author Tract, some writers prefer to claim that being neutral is similar to supporting the stronger side. However, as the True Neutral page on this Wiki will show, the reasons for being neutral number in the double digits, not including Lawful Neutral and Chaotic Neutral, or any combination thereof. Stories using this trope usually have a Hero Protagonist and a Villain Antagonist, though this is not always the case. They're also where you're most likely to find Beauty Equals Goodness, although there are stories with black-and-white morality where appearance doesn't reflect morality. While it shows up in stories of all kinds, Black-and-White Morality seems to occur frequently in media marketed for kids, due mainly to the Animation Age Ghetto, as well as all-ages works and The Moral Substitute, the latter of which doesn't allow room for any moral ambiguity. Many stories that use Black-and-White Morality tend to lean towards the idealistic end of the Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism, but this doesn't necessarily have to be the case - in a more cynical Crapsack World, there is more black than white, but the white can at least take a sour form. Works that use both Adaptational Villainy and Adaptational Heroism, or Historical Villain Upgrade and Historical Hero Upgrade for different characters are also deliberately employing this trope to make the moral conflict simpler. Of course, usage of Black and White morality in stories won't always end up sparkling white: this moral alignment is often associated with clichéd writing and propaganda. Of course, the prevalence of this moral system may lead to the belief that Good Is Boring. Thus, the aforementioned grey spots in a setting like this are a common Ensemble Dark Horse. Badass Decay occurs when the dark horse is whitewashed to conform to the prevailing system. Compare Grey-and-Gray Morality, Black-and-Gray Morality, White-and-Grey Morality, and Morality Kitchen Sink. Also see Shades of Conflict and Graying Morality. See Black-and-White Insanity when this sort of thinking by characters is presented as a sign of mental instability in the story. Please note even in a world where the moral lines are sharply drawn, there may still be characters or organizations that are presented as being 'grey'. A general rule of thumb as to whether or not black-and-white morality is present is that the heroes are almost always considered to be in the right, while the villains are always 'wrong'. Of course, the audience might disagree with the author's moral compass. If general attitudes on issues addressed change and/or the story is introduced to a very different culture, it may be viewed as Grey-and-Gray Morality, Black-and-Gray Morality, White-and-Grey Morality, or Blue-and-Orange Morality. noreallife |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_12058c99 | type |
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Hark! A Vagrant parodies this trope as it's used in classic literature with the character of Goodman Brown. Anytime Goodman sees another character doing something remotely bad he chalks them up as purely evil. He gets called on it but ignores them. | |
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Hark! A Vagrant (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_1246a926 | type |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_1246a926 | comment |
In Noonbory and the Super 7, the good guys are called borys, and the bad guys are called gurys. All borys are good and all gurys are bad, and there's no in-between. Oh, and characters with either label are stuck with it - no matter how many heinous deeds a bory commits or how many good deeds a gury does, neither can become the other. | |
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Noonbory and the Super 7 (Animation) | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_14cb9f30 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_14cb9f30 | comment |
The true exception to "sympathetic motivation" is A Bug's Life, where Hopper says that keeping the ants under control is more important than just getting food from them. No Freudian Excuse is also given in Cars 2 (the villains are motivated by greed and a desire to prove superiority), Coco (Ernesto is a Glory Hound who not only stole his partner's compositions but poisoned him to prevent the truth from coming out) and Luca (the Barbaric Bully has no qualms in hurting child competitors to keep his winning streak alive). Monsters, Inc. only has one of its villains being justifiable (as opposed to Randall being a jerk bent on one-upping rival Sulley, Waternoose wants to solve an energy crisis, even if through a hurtful method that also requires kidnapping). | |
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A Bug's Life | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_15bc94ac | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_15bc94ac | comment |
Dungeon Keeper of Love and Justice shares the trope, as a Recursive Fanfiction of the above. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_15bc94ac | featureApplicability |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_19ac33a0 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_19ac33a0 | comment |
The Mr. A comic lives and breathes this trope, being Ditko's interpretation of Ayn Rand's Objectivism in vigilante form. | |
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Mr. A (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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The Question under Ditko was essentially a more marketable version of Mr. | |
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The Question (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_1e7ca85f | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_1e7ca85f | comment |
Hercules adds this morality in adaptation. Hercules, Zeus, and Hera become purely good. Hades becomes purely evil. In the original myths, they were a lot more morally ambiguous. The only grey character in the movie is Meg, who is just jaded and trapped in a Deal with the Devil. Partly this is due to Hercules drawing more inspiration from The Golden Age of Comic Books than the original myths, and in part due to the Values Dissonance of the myths being very difficult to translate into a film appropriate for children. | |
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Hercules | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_23945975 | type |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_23945975 | comment |
The Disney Animated Canon uses this all the time. Pixar uses it pretty frequently too, though their villains are more likely to have sympathetic motivations. The true exception to "sympathetic motivation" is A Bug's Life, where Hopper says that keeping the ants under control is more important than just getting food from them. No Freudian Excuse is also given in Cars 2 (the villains are motivated by greed and a desire to prove superiority), Coco (Ernesto is a Glory Hound who not only stole his partner's compositions but poisoned him to prevent the truth from coming out) and Luca (the Barbaric Bully has no qualms in hurting child competitors to keep his winning streak alive). Monsters, Inc. only has one of its villains being justifiable (as opposed to Randall being a jerk bent on one-upping rival Sulley, Waternoose wants to solve an energy crisis, even if through a hurtful method that also requires kidnapping). Hercules adds this morality in adaptation. Hercules, Zeus, and Hera become purely good. Hades becomes purely evil. In the original myths, they were a lot more morally ambiguous. The only grey character in the movie is Meg, who is just jaded and trapped in a Deal with the Devil. Partly this is due to Hercules drawing more inspiration from The Golden Age of Comic Books than the original myths, and in part due to the Values Dissonance of the myths being very difficult to translate into a film appropriate for children. |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_241f2d00 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_241f2d00 | comment |
"Dhar Mann" videos usually have the protagonists as kind-hearted paragons that will usually not accept any help or money donations out of kindness to show how pure they are, while the antagonists are usually completely deplorable bullies or just assholes in general who go out of their way to bully and harass the protagonist until they either redeem themselves by the end or are reduced to groveling by a chain of contrived situations. | |
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Dhar Mann (Web Video) | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_25bfbf9e | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_25bfbf9e | comment |
In My Brave Pony: Starfleet Magic, Starfleet and the Unicornicopians are seen as good, while Titan and the various seasonal villains are evil, with very few exceptions. | |
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My Brave Pony: Starfleet Magic / Fan Fic | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_25bfbf9e | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_3c4ddc1e | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_3c4ddc1e | comment |
Elly Patterson of For Better or for Worse saw life in this matter in the fanfic The New Retcons. The two problems were that she could not handle anyone with different viewpoints from her and that her ideas of what 'black' and 'white' are were so twisted that they might as well be Blue-and-Orange Morality. This, among other things, contributed to Elly losing her mind for about two years. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_3c4ddc1e | featureApplicability |
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For Better or for Worse (Comic Strip) | hasFeature |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_467c5042 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_467c5042 | comment |
Dungeon Keeper Ami: The Dungeon Keeper world works by this trope, having only two sides for people to be on. The side of the Light Gods, which is Good, and that of the Dark Gods, which is Evil. And the confusion inspired by a champion of love and justice keeping a dungeon heart is one of Mercury's greatest strengths. Even the one outside group that believes she's not irredeemably evil wants to imprison her for eternity. Dungeon Keeper of Love and Justice shares the trope, as a Recursive Fanfiction of the above. |
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Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_5c6414a | comment |
Ojamajo Doremi: Rise of the Shadows: The Shadows are evil and trying to Take Over the World and exterminate their light halves. Said light halves are good and only act to defend themselves. | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_5f8df2d | comment |
Although The Ultimates (2002) as a whole runs on a Black-and-Gray Morality system, Hawkeye claims that the fight with the Chitauri was a black-and-white one. "Aliens who were in league with the Nazis, for God's sake". | |
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Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_62ceda02 | comment |
Sonichu functions in this way: Villains are rarely given any motivation beyond taking something that belongs to Sonichu or Chris Chandler or conquering something important to them, and Sonichu and Chris fight mainly to reverse this damage. Slaweel Ryam, in particular, fights Chris merely because she dislikes him. As the characters in the comic are reflections of the author's real-life struggles and the author has a huge ego, he cannot bear to give significant flaws to any of his heroes or redeeming traits to any of his villains. | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_66b44c12 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_66b44c12 | comment |
Dermabrasion: Discussed. Miruko admits that she prefers when this trope is in effect because she is happy when all she has to worry about is kicking villain ass. However, she also admits that Hawks has a point when he says that there are inherent problems with society and the hero system that result in people turning to crime and villainy that need to be dealt with. The fic repeatedly points out how morality is actually a very complex topic. | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Most Dungeons & Dragons settings: People who go "ping!" on Detect Good are good. People who set off the paladin's slaydar are evil. (People who don't trigger either are either using Undetectable Alignment or are the resident shade of grey, the neutral alignments). Playable races (such as humans, elves, dwarves, and such) tend to be good, while orcs, goblins, and other 'monstrous' humanoids tend to be Always Chaotic Evil. There are plenty of exceptions, though, with a number of villains from PC races showing up from time to time. The occasional good orc or goblin may make an appearance as well (especially in Eberron, which subverts a lot of the common expectations about alignment and race). There is a Succubus Paladin created on the Wizards site a while ago that detects as Lawful, Good, Evil, and Chaotic via the sundry detect spells. This is because Demon are Made of Evil and Chaos, while Paladins are philosophically Good and Lawful. |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_791d69f4 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_791d69f4 | comment |
In Loxare Hinder, it seems to be a recurrent mentality for any "big" hero: the Batfamily struggles very much with Jason's decision to murder criminals while Superman straight-up assaulted Red Hood because "killing is bad and mean, no matter the circumstances". | |
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Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_7f70202 | comment |
Oni Ga Shiku Series: Discussed. Majima comments that children tend to see the world in black and white after Izuku, who is very young at the time, asks him why the hero in a movie decided to save the villain's life. While Majima and Inko try to explain to him that people have both "good" and "bad" traits and that some people turn to evil because bad things happened to them or having good intentions (bringing up the villain in the movie as an example), it's obvious that the entire discussion flies over Izuku's head. Several years later, this worldview comes to bite Izuku in the ass when the news announces that Uncle Majima is dead, and specifically refers to him as a Yakuza Patriarch. Izuku is incapable or even refuses to see how the man who trains him to be a Hero and is always at his side being connected to a criminal organization and spends the whole week thinking they mean a different Goro Majima or that it's a nasty prank. It's a mark of Izuku's Character Development when by the end of that story arc, he takes a bullet to Save the Villain, much like the hero in the movie. | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_8125b468 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_8125b468 | comment |
In its various incarnations, Batman has played this trope straight, explored it from interesting directions, and frequently given the villains sympathetic moments and motivations (heroes who turn evil are, thankfully, very rare). Batman himself looks evil but is almost always a model of Incorruptible Pure Pureness; how sympathetic the villains are, however, varies by the medium. The 1960s TV series generally had straight-up Black and White Morality, with very few Heel Face Turns; the 1990s animated series was this way too, although it did provide the villains with more character depth. But the movies by Tim Burton, Joel Schumacher, and Christopher Nolan were far more likely to have Black-and-Gray Morality, with Batman Forever and The Dark Knight coming the closest to being pure black-and-white. | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_815366c8 | comment |
Izuku in Izuku Midoriya the Rabbit doesn't believe in this trope so much that he can't understand any concepts or beliefs beyond it; he literally cannot comprehend "Heroes" who only do their job for selfish reasons and not because it's the right thing to do. This, however, is Justified by the fact that Izuku is a rabbit with a minor case of Blue-and-Orange Morality who has a hard time understanding the more complex parts of human morality and behavior. | |
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Thirsty Sword Lesbians: At least in the pre-made material, the good guys are pure good and the bad guys have zero redeeming qualities. No exceptions. The writing also strongly pushes for this type of morality; one would think that the Seeker playbook, whose hat is growing up in one such "bad guy" society, would be useful for humanizing them, but the playbook as written simply reinforces that the society is completely corrupt. | |
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Parodied in the Sluggy Freelance Torg Potter parodies (of Harry Potter, obviously), where the wizards casually talk about people being good guys and bad guys, including the bad guys proudly identifying as such. You're supposed to have bad guys, apparently — even among students, where they are all sorted to the Wunnybun ("Slytherin") house. Gandledorf ("Dumbledore") even explains the Wunnybun students need to be treated badly enough to remain antagonistic because if treated well, they might become good, and then his paperwork would get all messed up. | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_8a1c34ad | comment |
Axe Cop. Very evident as it is written by a six-year-old. There are good guys (who can do anything they want), and bad guys (who don't need to do anything bad apart from being bad to be such). | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_902ab702 | comment |
In The Fear Mythos, the character "Achromatic Morality" demonstrates this perfectly — the clue's in the name. In her words, "there are two sides. The side that I am on, which is righteous; and the side I am not, which is monstrous." | |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_99f23dcd | comment |
Subverted in TFA Kaleidoscope, as Cybertronian propaganda treats the entire Autobot vs. Decepticon conflict as this. Autobots are good, Decepticons are evil. Ratchet dismisses this as lies and that the actual war was far more gray than anyone in high command wants to admit. Optimus even states that the Autobots were outright conquerors and tyrants before the war. | |
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Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_9fa75e90 | comment |
The World of Vicki Fox Vicki and her friends are all good characters with little to no flaws while Zephy is a complete Jerkass with no redeeming qualities whatsoever. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_9fa75e90 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_9fa75e90 | featureConfidence |
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The World of Vicki Fox (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_9fa75e90 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_a78cc92f | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_a78cc92f | comment |
A common element in Chick Tracts: the Christian protagonists are good while the nonbelievers are evil, or at least Jerkasses. This is the result of Chick's theology, which holds that either one has pledged themselves to his very specific idea of the Christian God or has thrown in their lot with the Forces of Evil, consciously or otherwise. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_a78cc92f | featureApplicability |
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Black-and-White Morality / int_a78cc92f | featureConfidence |
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Chick Tracts (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_a78cc92f | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ad6a095e | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ad6a095e | comment |
Princess: The Hopeful: The titular Princesses are exemplars and paragons of virtue, empowered by the Light (a Sentient Cosmic Force composed of hope, benevolence, and the desire to make the world a better place). Their opponents, the creatures of the Darkness, explicitly have no redeeming qualities whatsoever and may be killed without any moral qualms. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ad6a095e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ad6a095e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Princess: The Hopeful (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ad6a095e | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b5c45bf5 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b5c45bf5 | comment |
The RPG Over the Edge is very much Black-and-Grey Morality, but a drug in the setting called "Zorro" (short for "Zoroaster") induces delusions of black-and-white morality in the user. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b5c45bf5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b5c45bf5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Over the Edge (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b5c45bf5 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b7710510 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b7710510 | comment |
Falcon Twin's Evan views the world in this manner, in keeping with the teachings of his church. This causes considerable friction with the rest of the party's Black-and-Gray Morality. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b7710510 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b7710510 | featureConfidence |
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Falcon Twin (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b7710510 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b88b182f | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b88b182f | comment |
Invoked in The Dark Eye by a kind of the Fair Folk, who decided to split into a "good" and an "evil" kingdom faring war against each other to learn more about human behaviour and values. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b88b182f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b88b182f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Dark Eye (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_b88b182f | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_c75ae76b | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_c75ae76b | comment |
Dick Tracy is always black-and-white - with some notable exceptions - reflecting creator Chester Gould's own rigid standard of societal values. The 1990 Warren Beatty movie adaptation was the same way: Tracy is a Cowboy Cop but almost never gets called out on it, and only about 20 percent of the many (MANY!) gangster characters seen in the film had any redeeming qualities. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_c75ae76b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_c75ae76b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dick Tracy (Comic Strip) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_c75ae76b | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_cca8c3f6 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_cca8c3f6 | comment |
Talisman: The "Lightbearers" alternate ending in the Blood Moon expansion changes the nature of the normally free-for-all game into a cooperative one, where every player must choose a character of good alignment. The players cannot fight each other, and instead can assist each other in combat against the forces of evil, freely exchange items, and work together to win the game as a group before time runs out. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_cca8c3f6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_cca8c3f6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Talisman (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_cca8c3f6 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d3cc710e | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d3cc710e | comment |
In Blue Rose, your Character Alignment is either Light, Shadow or Twilight (neutral). There's a magic artifact used to make sure only light-aligned people get to become nobles in the kingdom of Aldis. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d3cc710e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d3cc710e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Blue Rose (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d3cc710e | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d4ff45a0 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d4ff45a0 | comment |
In Chrysalis Visits The Hague, this is subverted - Most of the ponies are adamant about the fact that Chrysalis is evil incarnate and they themselves are the defenders of all things harmonious. Suffice to say, the humans (Chrysalis' lawyer Estermann in particular) are quick to contest this. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d4ff45a0 | featureApplicability |
-0.3 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d4ff45a0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Chrysalis Visits The Hague (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d4ff45a0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d7aab7c1 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d7aab7c1 | comment |
And the confusion inspired by a champion of love and justice keeping a dungeon heart is one of Mercury's greatest strengths. Even the one outside group that believes she's not irredeemably evil wants to imprison her for eternity. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d7aab7c1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d7aab7c1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sailor Moon | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_d7aab7c1 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_e7194cb4 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_e7194cb4 | comment |
Children of Time runs on Deconstruction and Reconstruction of multiple elements, Even Evil Has Standards, and there's one gut-wrenching case of Jumping Off the Slippery Slope. Nevertheless, the lines between Good and Evil remain painfully clear. The Big Bad and his Dragons are realistically Obviously Evil, and though the heroes' ethics are definitely put above the law, they are there and pretty strict. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_e7194cb4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_e7194cb4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Children of Time (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_e7194cb4 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_eb37bd61 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_eb37bd61 | comment |
Code Prime: Ironically, the story leans more toward this direction than the original Code Geass, owing to how the Autobots siding with the Black Knights has progressively made the Black Knights (and especially Lelouch himself) more heroic, while the Decepticons siding with Britannia has made the latter worse than they were in canon. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_eb37bd61 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_eb37bd61 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Code Prime (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_eb37bd61 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ec261ef1 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ec261ef1 | comment |
In Epic, all Boggans are completely evil without any redeeming feature, while all the Leafmen and their allies are good. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ec261ef1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ec261ef1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Epic | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_ec261ef1 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_f7c6a4a0 | type |
Black-and-White Morality | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_f7c6a4a0 | comment |
In Lady Luck (Miraculous Ladybug), Marinette actually suffers from this, wholeheartedly believing in those she considers good and being distrustful of anyone she considers bad. She gets better as the story progresses. | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_f7c6a4a0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Black-and-White Morality / int_f7c6a4a0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Lady Luck (Miraculous Ladybug) (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Black-and-White Morality / int_f7c6a4a0 |
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