The lawful good paladin believes that the core should be given to the royal guard so it may be locked away deep underneath the kingdom. (Cont)
The lawful good paladin believes that the core should be given to the royal guard so it may be locked away deep underneath the kingdom. (Cont)
The neutral good bard believes that such a thing should be in the party's possession rather than handed off to strangers. (Cont)
The chaotic good druid knows that it's continued existence is nothing but a ticking time bomb and should be destroyed after it's served its purpose to remove the curse. (Cont)
The lawful neutral wizard believes that such a thing should be studied; if everyone knows how it works, then no one can have an unfair advantage. (Cont)
The true neutral fighter doesn't care what happens to the orb, He just wants to be rid of his curse. (Cont)
The chaotic neutral barbarian suggests that if it's thrown away in the ocean, it's out of their hands and is the fish's problem now (Cont)
The lawful evil warlock believes that with such a relic, the entire world would bend to his knees out of fear of annihilation, and he'd never even need to use it. (Cont)
The neutral evil rogue considers running off with the orb and selling it to the highest bidder. I'd a demagogue gets their hands on it, it's not the rogue's problem as long as they got their nut. (Cont)
The chaotic evil sorcerer sees its reflection in the core, and all the people that wronged him in the past. He could wipe them all away with the greatest of ease with this relic, then bask in the catharsis of retribution radiating off the fiery apotheosis of what remains.