A lot of people agree that D&D has historically heavily favored spellcasters after about a third of the way thru leveling and the classes we drastically unbalanced at the endgame. I'm trying to brainstorm an approach to correcting this inbalance in a way that maybe makes more sense than the 4e "make everyone a Vancian caster" approach. So, I'm thinking of look at fantasy source material: the novels and epic tales that inspired fantasy roleplaying games in the first place.
That's a good idea. Remember though, that the stories were written with a different mindset than an RPG, or even RPG based fiction, is written.
So, since I don't have the time to read all the great fantasy literature in one setting, I thought I'd ask everyone here:
How have you seen warior characters in fantasy books overcome spellcasters?
Yes, but the next part of your post sugests that you're already on the trail.
I recently read a Conan story where Conan's encounter with a wizard was a bit anticlimatic - he just threw a dagger at him and killed him in one shot while the wizard was trying to cast a spell. So, in that case, spellcasting probably took more than the typical "Standard Action" and the wizard had *very* low Hit Points and no protective magic in place (even though he was anticipating the encounter).
To be fair, Conan kills
a lot of people, not just spellcasters, like this. It's kind of a speciality of his. Not only that, but Howard (writing fiction in the 1930s, not RPGs in the 2010s) understands that people often die after one hit. A lot of the tension in Howard's stories comes not from the fight (though there is certainly a lot of that) but from the circumstances surrounding the fight. (I.e., the situation that leads to fight, the necessity of preparing for for, or getting to a point where you can win.
Conan also has a tendency to lose and then need help getting out of whatever hellish situation he's in. I just finished a story where the villain actually had Conan crucified. [spoil]It wasn't a good saving throw that got him out.[/spoil]
I'm going to recommend a book.
Hour of the Dragon it's Howard's only Conan novel, and I just read it for the first time recently. I really enjoyed it. More important to your research, it contains at least 4 spellcasters: Xaltotun, a recently awaked 3,000 year old 'necromancer'; Orastes, a former priest of the Mitra who turned to black arts; Zeiata, an old witch (more like a D&D druid, really or even a spellcasting ranger); and Hadrathus a priest of the cult of Asura. Each of them approaches magic in a different manner. Some aid Conan, other's oppose him. Seeing the different approaches in one story is kind of interesting.
Also, it contains a great line towards the end of chapter 20: "Magic depended, to a certain extent after all, on sword strokes and lance thrusts." In fiction and RPGs, I think that's probably the best outlook on magic one can have.