It's a combination of the source material and the vague nature of the protagonist's humanity. As he searches for the replicants, he slowly realizes they behave more human than he does leading up to an identity crisis left unresolved. Even if he's human, we're left wondering how much humanity he's lost by hunting beings that have started to truly appreciate the beautiful things in life. The multiple edits of the film are based on different production requirements and each leaves you with different questions about the nature of what it means to be human. The attention to details which may or may not be important based on your viewpoint.
Some insist Deckard is himself a replicant, based on some context clues and Harrison Ford's acting, who has been created for the sole purpose of hunting his own kind. Others insist he's just a normal human who realizes he has become cynical and jaded to humanity because of his life and job, and realizes through his final job he's wasting his life by ignoring things that bring joy.
I did not take multi-classing into account. Or the fact that different generations of fans would view the evolving continuity of each member of Mysteries Inc as different classes.
My group considers the paladin's entire job to either prevent the evil and neutral players from doing bad things to the villain, or get tricked into doing bad things to innocent NPCs.
Fred was the one who built the traps, so that might fit with him. I just saw a pic of all of them with her leaning over a large book and thought 'wizard'.
between3and20spaces t1_je4m249 wrote
Reply to Part of the sign in this stall is missing. by PadillaSPN
Instructions unclear. Flushed feminine prod.