Random thought that occurred to me: Should Mr Frog be capable of wielding magic? Gnomes are generally magical creatures in most other contexts I've encountered them in, and he seems pragmatic enough to use any conceivable tool at his disposal. On the other hand, he'd probably find some of the details of the current magic system as irritating as I do, would probably have used magic earlier if he could do so, and is already ten kinds of hax anyways, so I'm not sure.
I think that if he
could use magic, he would do so whenever it served his purposes, which would likely have been a lot more often than once in 11 years. If he saw that it could serve his purposes, he would endeavor to learn it, and wouldn't wait 11 years into the fort to start. Then again, it's not my character, and you can do with him as you please.
Personally, I think magic should always be at least a little chaotic and unpredictable, and therefore somewhat unreliable. Otherwise it isn't so much magic as it is science operating under different rules.
The way I wrote it in
is as science operating under different rules. If it must be said, I
absolutely detest the "just because" genre of magic. Why do wands work? They just do. Why do potions work? They just do. Why do spells work? They just do. <--- I hate that, especially in a universe where we're actively trying to explain everything. In the Battlefailed series, if something didn't make sense, they poked fun at it and moved on, leaving the whole continuity very messy. Thus far in Spearbreakers, we've gone out of our way to explain how even the most minute details of everything work.
What if it is a form of science, and our view of science is wrong?
Then, by how I define magic and science, it would merely be science instead of magic and our knowledge of science is faulty. With magic, you preform an experiment where literally every variable is unchanged and get a completely different result each time, and there is no pattern to what any given change would do to a spell. I.E. adding an extra frog eye to the mix of a potion at the very beginning of the recipe could make a water-breathing potion instead turn the drinker orange, a healing potion summon a swarm of frogs, or a strength-increasing potion growing an extra pair of arms out of your forehead.
This is precisely the definition of magic that I hate (the Harry Potter style of magic). It changes to suit the author. While I like to write without constraints, this takes it too far for me. As I explained it, magic is "supernatural forces". Therefore, while it can definitely do the same thing every time, it's a bit beyond the reaches of normal experimentation, as you can't measure or quantify the energy behind what goes on. It is "magic", but it has laws behind it, and is in fact a form of science, exactly as Aseaheru said.
In case you hadn't noticed, what you're suggesting undoes a huge portion of what I've already written... and is likely the prime source of my extreme displeasure. I didn't particularly want to write magic in myself, but it was the only thing that made sense in order for the Parasol arc to go smoothly.
Mr Frog's Rant on Science vs Magic
I agree with you wholeheartedly, on every little thing you said. (Mr Frog has not been a buffoon of any sort in anything I've written, by the way.)
Mr Frog, I myself don't like the Magic Vs Science either, I am just trying to provide a clear-cut line defining whether any given thing is one or the other. Clark's Third Law (and corollaries) leaves the only difference between the two as whether or not we understand how it works. Therefore, I make the dividing line this:
- If the underlying means of how something works can be deconstructed to provide consistent rules for how it works and/or follow follow pre-existing ones, then it is science. Otherwise, it is magic.
- All science in the same reality, universe, and dimension share the same set of rules, with no 2 rules being direct contradictions of each other.
- side-note: Magic powerful enough to change the rules science follows is the same as magic capable new realities/universes/dimensions, but these rules mean only with near omnipotence could expect to be able to control it enough to get the desired result, and even then it's all but guaranteed that some if not most minor details will be off.
- It does not matter whether or not any has figured out the rules science follows, only that they (that is, the rules) are.
Following this, magic can be far more powerful but science will always remain consistent, predictable, and reliable. A mage could one day find none of his spells do what they originally did (like his fireball spell now summoning an orange instead) but you can always rely on a gun and predict what effects any change in the design will have. (this would also serve as another good reason for why Dorf!Frog would not use magic.)
Aaaaannnndddd..... this pretty much contradicts everything I've done. At first I thought you were trying to classify what I've called "magic" as "science" - which I would've been
completely fine with - I'm writing it from Vanya's point of view anyway, and she's supposed to be a particularly imaginative girl with a penchant for adoring anything she thinks of as "magical".
As I kept reading further, it became more and more clear you're trying to make up new rules that contradict what I've written (and I think it might be worth noting at this point that you haven't really written anything yourself).
However, I won't object, if everyone else thinks it's better that way... Instead, I will simply take my writing elsewhere. I'd been idly considering splitting Vanya's story off from the main continuity, and if the rules get rewritten to this extent (basically everything I wrote getting tossed in the can), then I think this would be about when I decide to do it. I'm not going to bend the rules for myself just because they go against what I'd like.
I'm sorry if this came off as a bit hostile, but I think there isn't much that I would've less preferred to see when I came back.
Oh, and in other news, I'm back... and apparently with a vengeance. I lost access for a while.
edit:
I demand another journal of Vanya. (Hopefully not written in italics, no offense, but I can't read italics very well. My brain has the tendency to skip a lot while reading italics...)
Thanks, Tomio.
That was encouraging to read. I think I needed that. If you still want it, I'll try to get the next chapter out soon.