I highly doubt it, but again, just my opinion. Perhaps where you live, the people you meet, etc. would be different.No, they really would.
I’m not sure about Gaiman, but there are a couple type of “Wizards”/Magicians in the Riordanverse. The first and main type are the Magicians, people descended from Ancient Egyptian magicians that use hieroglyphs and godly powers to do magic. The other type are children of Hekate and other special demigods, who focus more on illusion/enchantment magic and using the Mist (magical barrier that prevents mortals from seeing supernatural stuff) to manipulate reality. There’s also Norse runecarvers, that use Norse runes engraved in runestones to channel magic. But magicians don’t really exist in the original Percy Jackson series, the Egyptian, Norse, and other magicians are in the spin-off and sequel series.To be fair, I'm not sure what the obvious Gaiman and Riordan Wizards are though.
Yes, exactly. The archetypical wizards for me growing up were the ones from Harry Potter and that show. I didn’t read/watch Lord of the Rings until I was in High School.How can anyone not bring up Wizards of Waverly Place?![]()
Stardust book and movie loosely based on book (both great though), Doctor Who episode, Good Omens with Terry Pratchett, both book and now new series based off book. Maybe I'm biased towards English authors, but Gaiman seems up there with Pratchett for renown as such.....
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The Sandman (comic book) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
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American Gods (TV series) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
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Neil Gaiman - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Sandman in particular (to me) is a big deal.
Stardust book and movie loosely based on book (both great though), Doctor Who episode, Good Omens with Terry Pratchett, both book and now new series based off book. Maybe I'm biased towards English authors, but Gaiman seems up there with Pratchett for renown as such.
Honestly, as other have said it was a a slow shift building up. But my theory is that the big push happened when the favoured world interaction shifted away from dungeon crawls towards more urban sandbox campaigns. Deception and slight of hand > brute force and reading scrolls.Notice how in old-school D&D the most important stats are Strength and Intelligence, but in modern D&D the most important stats are Dexterity and Charisma? I won’t go so far as to claim that that’s because the game is played more by theater kids than nerds now. But it is an interesting parallel.
Eat well, good sir.Okay, I did have fun doing this research, and learned some interesting things doing it,but now my brain is going to take a vacation while I get some supper.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.
(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.