There are some pretty chunky spoilers here about the Dark Urge playthrough of Baldur’s Gate 3, and perhaps one or two about other parts of the game. If you’re still planning a Dark Urge playthrough of the game, I’d suggest going in as unaware as possible. Bookmark this for later.
Being evil in games excites me. I cannot resist the temptation of pressing a big red button. I do it because I want to see what a game dares let me do, and I do it because it’s naughty. For months, I’ve been daring Baldur’s Gate 3 to see how far it will let me go in my evil adventure, and so far, it’s never backed down. I’ve pushed every red button I’ve found and the results have been extraordinary.
It’s not common. Being a villain in a game is anathema to being a hero. How can you be one and also the other? This question has fascinated me for a long time, and it’s why, when I first saw the Dark Urge option in Baldur’s Gate 3, I was captivated. Here was a background option I could apply to my character that would implant some kind of unrestrainable evil in me – a murderous desire that could race forward and take control at the merest provocation. It could mean the death of companions and majorly upended story events. Was I ready to cede so much control to something in a role-playing game?