The First Moral RPG
Ultima IV: Quest of the Avatar
Origin Systems · 1985 · Apple II, DOS, C64, Amiga, NES
In 1985, Richard Garriott did something no game designer had done before: he removed the villain. There was no evil sorcerer to defeat, no dark lord to destroy. Instead, Ultima IV asked: are you virtuous?
The premise is deceptively simple. The land of Britannia is at peace after the defeat of the Triad of Evil. Lord British believes that what Britannia now needs is not a hero but an exemplar - someone who embodies all Eight Virtues so completely that they inspire the entire population. The player must become the Avatar.
The Eight Virtues
Each virtue is tied to a city, a dungeon, a character class, and a colour of the reagent bag.
Honesty
City of Moonglow · Mage · Blue · Truth in all dealings
Compassion
City of Britain · Bard · Yellow · Care for others before self
Valour
City of Jhelom · Fighter · Red · Courage in the face of danger
Justice
City of Yew · Druid · Green · Equal treatment for all
Sacrifice
City of Minoc · Tinker · Orange · Giving without expectation
Honour
City of Trinsic · Paladin · Purple · Acting with integrity
Spirituality
City of Skara Brae · Ranger · White · Reflection and inner peace
Humility
Village of New Magincia · Shepherd · None · No class, no colour, no advantage
Why Ultima IV Was Revolutionary
The game didn't just remove the villain - it redesigned every system around morality. Combat had consequences: slaying non-hostile monsters reduced your moral standing. Trading fairly, donating to beggars, telling the truth to NPCs even when lies would be more convenient - all tracked.
The game asked players to interrogate their own RPG habits. Had you been stealing from chests? Killing fleeing enemies? Looting dungeons without need? These behaviours, rewarded by most RPGs, were now marks against you.
I wanted players to feel that finishing the game meant they'd become a better person - not just a more powerful character. The Avatar isn't a title you earn by defeating evil. It's a title you earn by being good.
Richard Garriott, speaking about Ultima IV
The Greatest Ultima
Ultima VII: The Black Gate
Origin Systems · 1992 · DOS, Amiga
Two centuries after the events of Ultima VI, Britannia has changed. Prosperity has bred complacency. A new organisation, the Fellowship, has spread across the land - offering community, meaning, and fellowship to all. Lord British endorses them. The population adores them. But the Avatar - arriving through a red moongate - senses something deeply wrong.
Ultima VII is a masterwork of systemic design. Every object in the world can be picked up, thrown, combined, cooked, eaten, or examined. Bakers bake bread using real ingredients; beehives produce honey that can be spread on that bread; the economy runs in real time whether the player observes it or not. The world does not exist to serve the player - it exists independently.
The Fellowship is revealed to be a front for the Guardian - a vast malevolent entity who plans to use the Black Gate (a great moongate) to enter Britannia and subjugate it. The Fellowship's theology, its self-help rhetoric, its charismatic leadership structure - all are clearly modelled on cult dynamics. In 1992, this was remarkable subject matter for a game.
The villain is never defeated in combat. Destroying the Black Gate requires understanding - tracing the Fellowship's hierarchy, uncovering its secrets, gathering evidence. Victory comes from knowledge, not from hitting things harder.
Technical and Design Achievements
Fully Interactive World
Every object can be picked up, moved, or combined. The world simulation runs whether the player is present or not - merchants restock, bakers bake, taverns fill for evening meals.
Real-Time Economy
Britannia has a functioning economy. Shops restock from suppliers. Prices fluctuate based on supply and demand. The player can observe - and disrupt - these systems.
NPC Schedules
Every NPC has a daily schedule: waking hours, meals, work, recreation, sleep. Catch an NPC at the wrong time and they may be unavailable - a genuine simulation of social life.
Narrative Sophistication
The Fellowship is a clear allegory for cult psychology - charismatic leader, community pressure, suppression of critical thinking. One of gaming's earliest serious engagements with this subject.
Ultima VII was the game where we finally had the technology to match our ambition. We wanted to build a world - not a game level. Every detail, from the miller's schedule to the texture of the grain sacks, was there to make Britannia feel real.
Warren Spector, reflecting on Ultima VII's development