Subject: Wall of text, inbound.
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Posted on: 2014-05-30 15:57:00 UTC

Now this will naturally be spoiler-y, so here we go.

1) Kerghan the Terrible (Arcanum: Of Steamworks and Magick Obscura)
From a certain point of view Kerghan is not actually a villain.
He's spent his two thousand years in banishment meditating on life and death, along with some practical experiments (he was, after all, the one who discovered the Necromantic Black school of magic) and finally came to the conclusion that the afterlife is preferrable to normal existence.
What makes him a threat is his desire to show everyone by killing everyone and his utter blindness to other views (unless the player happens to possess a Master rank in Persuasion, compare: Fallout.)
So why is he, as I've stated, not necessarily evil?
That is because he is right. His research on the state of the afterlife is correct, two party members (one undead, one resurrected) can confirm this. His work, should he succeed, will also result in the liberation of all undead souls from their host bodies, which is considered quite merciful given the universe's description of the undead (a soul torn from the world of the dead and forced into a body - even an animal carcass - that has just barely been restored to working order.)
It should be noted that the player is given the option of assisting Kerghan in completing his goal. Doing so will, however, render most morally "good" party members hostile and willing to fight to the death.

2) Tough one to decide, but it will have to be SHODAN.
What she has managed to do to all life within her reach borders on Reaper territory - and instead of a collective of who-knows-how-many-thousand species, each consisting of billions of individuals harvested and processed she was just one AI. One computer system turned rogue, managed to get awfully close to godhood, survived two purges (one by cyberjack, the other by bullet) and is still around if the second game's ending is to be believed...although I somehow have little hope to ever see System Shock 3.

3) The Catalyst. It's when Mass Effect stopped making sense. The Reapers were supposedly designed to protect all sentient life from exactly the same kind of phenomenon that they themselves are. It makes very little sense - and making sense should be what advanced AIs ought to excel in.

4) Again, a very tough one. But I sympathise very much with Nightmare Moon.
She is a phenomenon resulting from fear of rejection, which she herself rejected. I assume self-pity factored in, envy certainly did.
She became vindictive, aggressive and potentially delusional. It is likely that she would refuse any help given and any kindness shown as she views the world as hostile.
She was clearly proud of her unwavering loyalty to her own beliefs, incorrect and harmful as they are. After all everyone else abandoned her, so why should she not believe in herself?
Overall she shows flaws that I can relate to, the presence of which I can feel within myself.
Arrogance.
Contempt.
Pride.
Envy.

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