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Loyal to the Position
- 229 statements
- 42 feature instances
- 26 referencing feature instances
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Suppose that we live in The Good Kingdom. Our wise king hires a treasurer — to mint coins, balance the Kingdom's budget, raise revenue, borrow funds cheaply, and all of the other Boring, but Practical essentials of keeping the Kingdom running. Our treasurer does an exemplary job. Then The Usurper comes, murders the king, and converts our kingdom into The Empire, with the requisite torture chambers, Gladiator Games, and all that. The Usurper realizes, though, that in addition to torturers, he still needs a treasurer — and no one has proven himself more capable than the old treasurer from his predecessor's days, so the treasurer stays on, and continues minting coins, accounting for funds, and all that. Eventually, La Résistance overthrows The Empire, and introducing democracy and creating The Federation. Elections are held, delegates are sent to the parliament, a president is elected — and someone still needs to run the treasury. Who is better qualified to handle the shaky finances of the newborn federation than the experienced elder statesman who served the old king and the usurper, our old treasurer? The treasurer holds onto his job, as always, and continues doing an excellent job of keeping finances in order. A character who is Loyal to the Position is adept at surviving Regime Change with position intact. It is possible that he is simply very adaptable, or possible that he has Ultimate Job Security or Vetinari Job Security. This character is not necessarily The Quisling, or lacking principles. It is possible that the Position Loyalist regards himself as above the fray of factionalism, and would describe himself as "loyal to the kingdom, not the king." He might regard keeping the practical aspects of the state functioning as far more constructive and beneficial to the populace than involving himself with factional loyalties — and he could be right. Then again, it could be that he's just an opportunist or The Quisling who fights for what he perceives to be the strongest side, and even if he doesn't start out that way, it's possible that the character Loyal To The Position will cross serious moral boundaries — if not a Moral Event Horizon — thanks to loyalty. If being a dutiful treasurer means signing the checks to cover the costs of building death camps, however, then a character Loyal to the Position who does that can easily become Obliviously Evil. The lower in the hierarchy of government you go, the more likely members of the old regime are to continue into the new regime. At the bottom, an ordinary postal worker or accountant will almost always hold onto the old job. At the top, the head of government pretty much must change by definition for it to be a regime change. The question lies in the middle and near-top of the hierarchy — the directors, assistant secretaries, deputy ministers, colonels, and other fairly high-ranking personnel. These usually change, but the Position Loyalist is distinguished by his ability to hold on to these positions in spite of such changes. Such a character will often (but not always) be Lawful Neutral. Compare Professional Butt-Kisser. Related to I Fight for the Strongest Side!, Just Following Orders, and My Country, Right or Wrong. Examples |
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Loyal to the Position / int_10bc0a19 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_10bc0a19 | comment |
In Night Watch: A number of people are mentioned as being turned out on the replacement of Lord Winder with Lord Snapcase (including the food taster), but the change affects the servants very little, as someone is always needed who knows where the brooms are kept. Mr. Slant the zombie lawyer, who is in some cases an antagonist and more helpful in others (having been a lawyer for so long, he is closer to True Neutral than most others). |
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Night Watch (Discworld) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_1aacbbc9 | type |
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Dragon Age: The games have a few examples: In Dragon Age II, Hawke encounters Seneschal Bran, an Obstructive Bureaucrat who works for the Viscount of Kirkwall. It doesn't matter who that happens to be or even if that person exists at all, he is loyal to the Viscount of Kirkwall — and something of a Jerkass to almost everyone else. A sidequest in Dragon Age: Inquisition has the Inquisitor encounter a group called the Blades of Hessarian and learn of the rules by which anyone may challenge the current leader for his position in a Duel to the Death. As it turns out, the current leader has been making the Blades — normally a sort of religious militia — raid the Storm Coast like bandits, and most of the Blades hate the guy, but they keep following him because nobody has succeeded in ousting him through a formal challenge. The Inquisitor can do so and become the new leader, whereupon the Blades promptly swear their loyalty. |
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Loyal to the Position / int_1b7f85df | type |
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Inverted in K - Clansmen seem to be loyal to their Kings specifically, not to the position. In the prequel novels, when Reisi Munakata Awakened as the Blue King, several members of the old Blue King's Clan didn't want to follow him and ended up causing him trouble. Likewise, when the Gold King dies, his Clan disbands. Inverted the most with Kuroh Yatogami, a Clansman to the late Colorless King, who sent Kuroh to find and kill his successor, should the successor turn out to be evil. Played somewhat straight with the Red Clan, who follow their new King after their old one dies - more of an aversion, though since Anna had been one of the previous King's closest Clansmen. |
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Loyal to the Position / int_1bdeba5a | type |
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Gateway, an Aborigine who appeared in X-Men. He spent most of his time in quiet meditation, but he also had the power to open portals, and would do so for anyone who requested it, no questions asked. | |
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Loyal to the Position / int_2ee053b1 | type |
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Yes, Your Grace: According to one of the dialog options that shows up during a discussion about Eryk's heir, Audry is expected to be the advisor to whoever sits on the Davern throne. It doesn't keep him from wanting to see Eryk's family line continue. | |
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Yes, Your Grace (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_2f9de432 | type |
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In the fantasy game Nocturne In Yellow, one of the bosses you fight in the haunted mansion is Domovoi, a household spirit. He's not really a bad guy, and in fact he hates the current residents of the mansion for killing the previous owners—but since he must serve the master of the mansion, he has no choice but to fight you. | |
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Loyal to the Position / int_34834a5c | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_34834a5c | comment |
In Kickassia, Fritz Von Baugh, Minister of Keeping Things Orderly, appears to be this way as first, but it soon becomes clear he's trying to stir up resentment towards The Nostalgia Critic so he'll be overthrown. | |
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Loyal to the Position / int_39fe00f1 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_39fe00f1 | comment |
A sidequest in Dragon Age: Inquisition has the Inquisitor encounter a group called the Blades of Hessarian and learn of the rules by which anyone may challenge the current leader for his position in a Duel to the Death. As it turns out, the current leader has been making the Blades — normally a sort of religious militia — raid the Storm Coast like bandits, and most of the Blades hate the guy, but they keep following him because nobody has succeeded in ousting him through a formal challenge. The Inquisitor can do so and become the new leader, whereupon the Blades promptly swear their loyalty. | |
Loyal to the Position / int_39fe00f1 | featureApplicability |
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DragonAgeInquisition | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_3b34143f | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_3b34143f | comment |
Dolores Umbridge from the Harry Potter books. First she very thoroughly implements the policies of a Minister of Magic who is in utter denial regarding the resurrection of Voldemort. When we meet her again a few books later, she works for Voldemort! A less clear-cut example than most on this page, however, since she's so sadistic that it's highly likely she's in it more for the abuse of power than the job in itself. Also Voldemort set up a puppet regime rather than outright announce his conquest, giving Umbridge some degree of plausible deniability. Either way, once Voldemort's been killed and overthrown, the resistance aren't very understanding of the crimes she committed under the regime. Word of God says they threw the book at her but good. | |
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Harry Potter | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_468bebb0 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_468bebb0 | comment |
In the Discworld series: In Pyramids, High Priest Dios has always served whoever is currently the Pharaoh. Always. Played with in that he's been doing it so long he knows what orders the Pharaoh is "supposed" to give, and follows those "orders" regardless of what the guy behind the golden mask has to say about it. He's loyal to his own idea of the Pharaoh. In Night Watch: A number of people are mentioned as being turned out on the replacement of Lord Winder with Lord Snapcase (including the food taster), but the change affects the servants very little, as someone is always needed who knows where the brooms are kept. Mr. Slant the zombie lawyer, who is in some cases an antagonist and more helpful in others (having been a lawyer for so long, he is closer to True Neutral than most others). In Jingo, Commander Vimes (aided by a prompt from Vetinari) copes with a temporary regime change that elevates Lord Rust to Patrician, when he realises his oath of loyalty as a Watchman is not to any named ruler - but to the abstract concept of maintaining the peace. This gives him freedom of action and enables him to maintain and protect the Peace on a big scale - by arresting an entire battlefield for Breach Of The Peace and averting a war. |
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Loyal to the Position / int_468bebb0 | featureApplicability |
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Discworld | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_468c2a7a | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_468c2a7a | comment |
Judge Dee: Judges are moved to a different position in a different province every few years, to avoid complacency and corruption settling in. | |
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Judge Dee | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_491200d5 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_491200d5 | comment |
A curious inversion happens in the original ThunderCats. Mumm-Ra is a servant of four evil entities called the Ancient Spirits of Evil and gains his powers from them. However, as Snarf discovered, these four beings will grant the same powers to anyone who enters the burial chamber and requests it. (Possibly they have a weird sense of humor or are capable of outright betrayal, but then, they are evil.) | |
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Thundercats | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_4be3aedd | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_4be3aedd | comment |
In Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers, there was Finster, Rita's alchemist who was in charge of creating monsters. Although he seemed to have more loyalty to Rita than to anyone else, he seemed willing to take orders from almost any of the villains, including Lord Zedd, Master Vile, and even Goldar; the only one he refused to obey was Rita's brother Rito when Rita put him in charge for a day, informing him that he served only Zedd and Rita. (Finster didn't even seem to be truly evil, really; he was more like a Punch-Clock Villain. The Soul of the Dragon comic eventually revealed he was purified by Zordon's wave at the end of "In Space" and became an ally of the Rangers afterward.) | |
Loyal to the Position / int_4be3aedd | featureApplicability |
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Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_5755b96a | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_5755b96a | comment |
In The Order of the Stick, this is what Tarquin pretends to be, serving a succession of rulers. However, he's actually The Chessmaster ruling as Evil Chancellor, and he allows the occasional revolution to remove the puppet ruler du jour in order to let the populace work out its frustration. | |
Loyal to the Position / int_5755b96a | featureApplicability |
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The Order of the Stick (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
Loyal to the Position / int_5755b96a | |
Loyal to the Position / int_58d80a4a | type |
Loyal to the Position | |
Loyal to the Position / int_58d80a4a | comment |
In Jingo, Commander Vimes (aided by a prompt from Vetinari) copes with a temporary regime change that elevates Lord Rust to Patrician, when he realises his oath of loyalty as a Watchman is not to any named ruler - but to the abstract concept of maintaining the peace. This gives him freedom of action and enables him to maintain and protect the Peace on a big scale - by arresting an entire battlefield for Breach Of The Peace and averting a war. | |
Loyal to the Position / int_58d80a4a | featureApplicability |
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Jingo | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_5e9ea81e | type |
Loyal to the Position | |
Loyal to the Position / int_5e9ea81e | comment |
In Black Panther, the Dora Milaje are sworn to serve the king of Wakanda, whoever that may be. As a result, they agree to follow Killmonger after he seems to have killed T'Challa in ritual combat. However, when T'Challa is revealed to still be alive, thereby leaving the challenge for the throne unresolved, Killmonger's refusal to finish the fight honorably causes them to reassert their loyalty to T'Challa. | |
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Black Panther (2018) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_5eff5027 | type |
Loyal to the Position | |
Loyal to the Position / int_5eff5027 | comment |
Invoked in Fen Quest: The oath of a Field Marshal entails loyalty not to the gold noble who appointed them, but to the gold title, which implies not just succession but also the right and duties of the gold noble. | |
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Fen Quest (Roleplay) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_69d15cc0 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_69d15cc0 | comment |
Marvel Cinematic Universe: In Thor, Heimdall says he's this, but when Loki takes command momentarily, he shows he is actually loyal to Asgard, not just to whoever is in charge (although he sticks to the letter of his new ruler's orders until the betrayals become unsubtle). He does this against the true king Odin in the sequel too. Odin instructs Heimdall to warn Odin of any attempts at treason that he uncovers, as he can see everything. He's well aware of Thor's plans to disobey Odin and confronts the gang on the matter and they explain. Heimdall then goes to Odin to alert Odin of the plot of treason, specifically his own... which is enough to distract Odin while the heroes get away. In Black Panther, the Dora Milaje are sworn to serve the king of Wakanda, whoever that may be. As a result, they agree to follow Killmonger after he seems to have killed T'Challa in ritual combat. However, when T'Challa is revealed to still be alive, thereby leaving the challenge for the throne unresolved, Killmonger's refusal to finish the fight honorably causes them to reassert their loyalty to T'Challa. |
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Marvel Cinematic Universe (Franchise) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_6c1d09b3 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_6c1d09b3 | comment |
Charon, the ghoul bodyguard from Fallout 3, is brainwashed to loyally serve whomever holds his contract. When you first encounter him, his current boss is Ahzrukhal, but if you do a certain job for Ahzrukhal, he'll give you the contract as payment. When you inform Charon that he works for you now, he politely excuses himself for a moment to go blast Ahzrukhal in two with his shotgun. Most likely the only reason he hadn't done so already is that his brainwashing made him incapable of deliberately harming the holder of his contract, no matter how much he might want to. | |
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Fallout 3 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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In Mortal Kombat X, Ermac was created by magic to be the bodyguard of whoever holds the title of Kahn of Outworld. This was originally Shao, then later Kitana, Kotal, and Mileena. | |
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Mortal Kombat X (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_73d7930f | type |
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In Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Odo served the Cardassians and the Bajorans, not necessarily out of a loyalty to them but out of a desire to keep order. This actually made Starfleet Command uncomfortable and they sent Eddington to run security alongside Odo, something Odo enjoys rubbing in their face. There's also a minor, subverted example early on when Gul Dukat shows up in the employ of the new and theoretically democratic Cardassian government despite being a rather notorious figure in the previous regime. He claims he is a loyal officer of the armed forces and took an oath to serve the legitimate Cardassian government, whoever that government might happen to be, but it's patently obvious that his motives were rather more self-serving. |
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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_794817ad | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_794817ad | comment |
In the backstory of Bioshock, this was Suchong's whole deal. Originally he worked with Frank Fontaine to engineer plasmids and experiment with ADAM. But once Andrew Ryan killed Fontaine and assimilated his business empire into his own, Suchong had no qualms whatsoever with jumping ship to Ryan's company to do exactly the same thing he did for Frank. In his backstory, he was a Korean doctor who dealt opium on the side. When the Japanese forces killed every member of his village, he was left alive because he happily offered to extend his services to the new occupying force. | |
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BioShock (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_863b7825 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_863b7825 | comment |
Yes, Minister: In the show, and Real Life in the United Kingdom, this is the designated role of the Permanent Secretary. Sir Humphrey says that he (and the entire civil service) is loyal to his minister regardless of party or competence. Although in practice he is loyal more to the civil service than anything else. In fact, it's almost an inversion, where the partisan elected officials end up doing whatever the nonpartisan civil service wants them to. |
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Yes, Minister | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_86bb8df | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_86bb8df | comment |
In Servant of the People, Vasiliy inherits two employees from the outgoing president who simply keep doing their job: a secretary and a bodyguard. The latter is in fact so loyal to his job, that when Vasiliy fires him, he loses all sense of purpose in life, and once hired back, resumes doing his job as if nothing happened. | |
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Servant of the People | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_9819631f | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_9819631f | comment |
Obsidian and Strika in Beast Machines don't particularly care what Megatron is up to; they simply serve whoever rules Cybertron, and when Megatron is apparently destroyed, they seriously consider siding with the Maximals. Thrust calls them out on this, arguing that if they're loyal to everybody, can they truly be loyal to anybody? This comes up a decent amount among the baddies of the Transformers franchise. Should The Starscream succeed in taking over, there will be many who will then unquestioningly follow their orders. Should their old boss come back, they will go back to serving them. An example would be Soundwave from Transformers: Prime. |
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Beast Machines | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_999855bb | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_999855bb | comment |
In the Heroes of Might and Magic series, Castle Stewards are this by definition - they swear allegiance to the castle, not the lord, so if the castle gets conquered, they'll fight to protect it from the next would-be conqueror who comes along - even if it's the guy who originally hired him. | |
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Heroes of Might and Magic (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Loyal to the Position / int_9d47a2a2 | type |
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Loyal to the Position / int_9d47a2a2 | comment |
In A Song of Ice and Fire, the Order of Maesters are prime examples. A Maester, a kind of scholar-monk trained in several academic skills and disciplines, is assigned to the household of a majority of the Seven Kingdoms' nobility to serve as advisors. This they do with extreme devotion. Even if a castle should be taken over by a new ruler, the Maester will continue to serve that new ruler as competently as the old. This provides them a measure of safety, as attackers will almost always ignore the Maester while purging the household. There are instances where nobles will play their cards close to the chest around their Maesters when they descend from a current enemy, but within the series no Maester has betrayed their assigned house in favor of blood ties. | |
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A Song of Ice and Fire | hasFeature |
Loyal to the Position / int_9d47a2a2 | |
Loyal to the Position / int_9ff1dc28 | type |
Loyal to the Position | |
Loyal to the Position / int_9ff1dc28 | comment |
In King of the Castle, it doesn't matter if the King lives out their reign in peace or tyranny, or if they are toppled by a usurper from one of the other regions; if you continue a Dynasty, the Chancellor, Marshal, Spymaster, and Treasurer will act in the same capacities for the new King as they did for the old one. And again after the new King's reign ends, and again, and... | |
Loyal to the Position / int_9ff1dc28 | featureApplicability |
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In Pyramids, High Priest Dios has always served whoever is currently the Pharaoh. Always. Played with in that he's been doing it so long he knows what orders the Pharaoh is "supposed" to give, and follows those "orders" regardless of what the guy behind the golden mask has to say about it. He's loyal to his own idea of the Pharaoh. | |
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The second of the Books of Samuel brings us Ahithophel, a man so renowned for his counsel that it was as if someone sought the advice of God himself. He was Counselor to David but when Absalom usurped David and forced him to flee, Ahithophel remained behind to act as counselor to Absalom. David prayed to God to bring Ahithophel's counsel to ruin. Eventually Absalom ignores a single piece of advice from Ahithophel and this alone pushes Ahithophel over the edge. | |
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Game of Thrones: Varys is probably the best example, holding his position as Master of Whispers (i.e. The Spymaster) under the Targaryens, the Baratheons, the Lannisters, and then the Targaryens—well, a Targaryen, not that there are many left—again. This last one is a break from the usual pattern, as Danaerys is not the "official" regime (not yet, anyway), although from his perspective he was always acting according to what he understands to be the "good of the Realm"—and, given that he knows everything from his spy network, he has a good sense of what's good for the Realm. Petyr Baelish also sticks through the transitions, serving as Master of Coin (i.e. the royal treasurer) under multiple regimes, until he decides it's prudent to get the hell out of Dodge, but in his case, it's more naked self-serving ambition than loyalty to anything. The Maesters are assigned to a castle and are sworn to offer loyal service to their lords, even when the castle changes hands. When Theon seizes control of Winterfell, Maester Luwin insists that he'll continue to loyally serve the new regime, and does (if not especially enthusiastically). Grand Maester Pycelle counseled Aerys Targaryen, then Robert Baratheon, then Joffrey, then Tommen, even through the wildest excesses of Cersei's regency. The Kingsguard is expected to guard the king, no matter who he is or how he came to the throne. After King Aerys the Mad had the throne taken from him by Robert in a bloody civil war, Jaime Lannister is reviled as an oathbreaker, while Barristan Selmy is respected as a good and honorable knight. The reason being that Jaime sided with Robert's rebellion by killing Aerys (a truly horrific king), while Barristan stayed loyal to Aerys until the end. Despite this, both of them remain in their positions under the new regime. Ironically, Selmy eventually wonders if Jaime had been right all along. Aeron Greyjoy doesn't seem to favor any of the candidates in the Kingsmoot. Be it before or afterwards, he is only there to conduct the election and serve whoever is elected. |
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In Thor, Heimdall says he's this, but when Loki takes command momentarily, he shows he is actually loyal to Asgard, not just to whoever is in charge (although he sticks to the letter of his new ruler's orders until the betrayals become unsubtle). He does this against the true king Odin in the sequel too. Odin instructs Heimdall to warn Odin of any attempts at treason that he uncovers, as he can see everything. He's well aware of Thor's plans to disobey Odin and confronts the gang on the matter and they explain. Heimdall then goes to Odin to alert Odin of the plot of treason, specifically his own... which is enough to distract Odin while the heroes get away. |
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Leverage: In the season 1 finale the entire plan depended on Sterling being one of these. Sterling always fell somewhere between Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist and Punch-Clock Villain, unlike his boss, Ian, who was a Corrupt Corporate Executive. Once the team jeopardized Ian's position in the company, Sterling betrayed him in a heartbeat. STERLING NEVER LOSES. | |
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House of the Dragon: After the death of King Viserys, Otto Hightower begins the motions to put his grandson Aegon in power and commands the Kingsguard's leader Harrold Westerling to murder Rhaenyra and her family to avoid potential rivals to the throne. A disgusted Westerling reminds him that his duty is to follow and guard the king, not the wannabe kingmakers on the Small Council, so please call him when a king is crowned. | |
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Doctor Who, "The Invasion of Time": On Gallifrey, the Vardans invade and take over. Castellan Kelner serves the Vardans. The Vardans are replaced by the Sontarans. Kelner obeys the Sontarans without missing a beat. | |
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Darkness Series: The Jelgavan tort... Enhanced Interrogation Specialist is an example. He shows up working for the puppet Algarven government when Talsu is tricked into admitting to wanting to start an underground movement to free Jelgava from Algarven control. Asked how he could side with his country's enemies, the interrogator simply replied that he's just doing the job he's always done and serving the kingdom. Later, when Jelgava is freed and the rightful king restored, Talsu is again arrested and meets THE SAME interrogator who smugly points out that just because the regime changed didn't mean his job was any less necessary to protect the kingdom. Ironically, when Talsu's connections cause the nation of Kuusan to demand his release, the interrogator finds this despicable and derisively wishes Talsu a "happy life" in exile. | |
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In Demolition Man, Dr. Cocteau's assistant blindly serves whoever's in charge. | |
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Valharik, the captain of the guard in Melnibone, upon Yyrkoon's taking of power in the first novel of The Elric Saga, betrayed his mistress Cymoril, Elric's Love Interest, and took her to her tower. He cut down one of his own men who tried to defend her against Yyrkoon, and on Yyrkoon's orders, he fed the poor guy to Cymoril's slaves. When Elric takes back the Ruby Throne from Yyrkoon, Valharik explains that he serves the Ruby Throne, no matter who sits upon it. Needless to say, Elric doesn't buy this, and in a truly ruthless move, he sentences Valharik to execution, with his flesh to be fed to Yyrkoon at the feast that Elric plans to hold. | |
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Pikmin: Captain Olimar believes that the Pikmin that they will loyally follow anyone who pulls them out of the ground. | |
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Star Wars: The Bad Batch, set during the transition from the Republic to the Empire, portrays most (but not all) Clone Troopers as this. They have a Restraining Bolt, of course, but some of them (not just the Bad Batch, whose Restraining Bolts don't work right) have disobeyed when ordered to opress the people they'd previously been ordered to protect, which suggests that the ones who don't have never even thought of doing so. | |
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In Dragon Age II, Hawke encounters Seneschal Bran, an Obstructive Bureaucrat who works for the Viscount of Kirkwall. It doesn't matter who that happens to be or even if that person exists at all, he is loyal to the Viscount of Kirkwall — and something of a Jerkass to almost everyone else. | |
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In City of Heroes, Ghost Widow is bound to the material plane by her loyalty to Arachnos as an organization. As long as the organization exists in some form, she cannot be permanently banished. This doesn't mean she's loyal to anyone specific in the organization. In fact, she's often treated as a borderline Anti-Villain who openly dislikes her Co-Dragons Captain Mako and Black Scorpion and only pays lip service to Lord Recluse himself. | |
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