Personally I never liked Alignments in DnD so its the one thing I am happy to see not implemented.

Heck they are practically never done right in video games anyways.

A reputation system fits better in the same niche in terms of function anyways. Alignment systems tend to get super wonky and function weirdly.

Pathfinder Kingmaker is a great example of an Alignment system done so hilariously badly that it's not even funny. Overzealous incorporation of the system there. Saying the most random of things changes your alignment. Instead of doing things - so pretending to be a good guy with evil goals will have you be generally good alignment. Funny consequence. It's only something that works in tabletop and really only when you have a good DM who understands Alignments.

I'm not sure Larian can handle doing an Alignment system right, so thank the gods it's not a thing. I think its fine as a general descriptor of a character, that can change rather fluidly, not as a hard thing some folk take it as.