So let me start by saying I am by no means an expert in Psychology. I am college educated and can grasp basic psychological concepts but am not an expert by any sense of the word....
Ok with the disclaimer out of the way, I noticed something about the tanks as I finished 2 of their quests and am working down the third. I noticed that the driving principles of each seems at least to me to correspond to one of Sigmund Freud's three parts of the human psyche, the Id, Ego, and Super-Ego.
The primal Id fits a bit to the Warrior, letting your "Inner Beast" run free. The Ego is the Dark Knight, acting as a go between between the Id and reality, raging but for the right reasons or the reasons that best fit. And finally the Super-Ego and the Paladin, focusing on Willpower and a very high unrealistic code of ethics and actions.
As I said I'm no expert and may have this all wrong. I was hopeful to get some Psych students to either point out how I'm wrong or if I am on to something sort of flush it out and explain it to me.
Ok with the disclaimer out of the way, I noticed something about the tanks as I finished 2 of their quests and am working down the third. I noticed that the driving principles of each seems at least to me to correspond to one of Sigmund Freud's three parts of the human psyche, the Id, Ego, and Super-Ego.
The primal Id fits a bit to the Warrior, letting your "Inner Beast" run free. The Ego is the Dark Knight, acting as a go between between the Id and reality, raging but for the right reasons or the reasons that best fit. And finally the Super-Ego and the Paladin, focusing on Willpower and a very high unrealistic code of ethics and actions.
As I said I'm no expert and may have this all wrong. I was hopeful to get some Psych students to either point out how I'm wrong or if I am on to something sort of flush it out and explain it to me.