D&D General Putting The Awe Back In Magic

The burgher himself unlocked her shackles, making a grand show of producing the right key from the thick ring at his belt. The oldest, most ornate, and most worn of the bunch.

He gave it to two of the younger men and waved at them to free the prisoner, taking himself well back and away to watch them struggle with the old locks.

And as the heavy metal cuffs fell from her wrists to the stones underfoot with a clang and a rattle, he sneered and announced, “I’ll believe in this mighty magic when I see it, and not a moment before.”

His words were meant for the watching men of the town, not the freed captive, but he turned when they were done to see how she took them.

The young woman of few words met his bristle-browed gaze with a slight smile. Then she shrugged, turned away from him and the men of the town in a swirl of dark tattered robes, and murmured something swift and liquid under her breath, words they couldn’t quite catch—or that were in a tongue unknown.

And the air around her swiftly-weaving fingertips was suddenly alive with sparks, racing motes of light that spiraled down to the floor in front of her worn-toed boots like fireflies caught in a whirlpool.

And then burst with the roar of a dozen lions into a raging pillar of white flames taller than the loftiest towers of the Castle, a pillar that cracked and melted—melted, by All The Gods!—flagstones it spun across as it marched away from her to strike the towering black gates.

And with shrieks as ear-piercing as they were brief, those thick armour plates and the man-thick timbers that wore them were gone, locks and hinges and stout door-bars and all—simply…gone.

Leaving only an empty doorframe, its arch scorched by the vanished whorl of flames.

As the men of the town all stared at it in disbelief, a few shards of blackened stone, cracked away from the massive blocks of the arch by the heat of that brief magic, plummeted from the arch to shatter on the blackened flagstones. Clack, clack…klak.

“Well, now,” the burgher stammered, his voice seeming far away. And shorn of all bluster. Everyone turned to hear his verdict.

And blinked at what they beheld. Despite his paunch and wrinkled old age, the leader of the town had somehow taken himself half across the chamber in a trice, to the grudging shelter of the lee of an old stone pillar. “Well, now.”


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Magic.

The ‘not real’ part of our fantasy roleplaying games, and fiction.

Yet also an essential part; we feel vaguely cheated when it’s not there, even if it’s scarce or long-fallen from old days of greatness. The element that makes so many monsters dangerous and feared, and that keeps many imaginary worlds from being ruled by the brute who commands the biggest, nastiest gang of brutes (er, king with the biggest army).

Yet the very same precise codification of magic, its workings, and the details of its clashings that make it understood and somhow more “fair” around the gaming table has, by the nature of exhaustive explanation, robbed magic of its chief glory: awe.

That’s a shame, because awe is one of the emotions (or moods, if you prefer) that we get to feel least in our lives, especially in this age of information, when most people can swiftly learn a lot about anything and so strip away its mystery, the lure of the unknown, in short order.

Obviously magic, like everything else, will have more awe clinging to it when it’s mysterious rather than known to nigh-everyone in full detail. When the game master’s descriptions of what a spell looks like when it manifests, and what it does, are attentively listened to by everyone around the gaming table—because everyone’s eager (nay, desperate) to learn all they can.

Rather than just flipping to the right page of a rulebook to read all about it. Which points at this: one road to this sort of mystery that’s available only to game masters running their own rules systems or substantially modifying published rules systems is to keep the practical details of magic (how spells are cast, the gestures and ingredients and incantations—verbal, somatic, and material components in D&D) secret. Things to be observed when others cast magic, and noted down in one’s own magical workbooks, or said by NPCs who are paid much in coin and service to do so, or paid even more to train a PC in how to cast and wield a lone spell.

This precious secrecy will tend to make those who can cast spells do so in private, or in public only in emergencies or for a lot of compensation.

It also, at a single stroke, makes magic, and its lore, the most prized treasure in a game.

Another way of making magic more awe-inspiring is to have it vary in effects from place to place, or by who or what is involved.

If a stranger wizard casts a recognizable spell and it shakes the valley rather than snapping in midair like a firecracker, there’ll be instant awe. Or at least respect, if not fear.

If a spell that’s supposed to force open a door is cast with the aid of a grimy old bone carving that looks small in the caster’s palm, and destroys the door and the wall around it rather than just cracking the door open, again there’ll be a reaction that could soon be awe.

And if a spell cast in a sinister ruin deep in a gloomy forest either sputters feebly or splits the heavens with a deafening roar, rather than conjuring its usual merry lantern-flame, awe won’t be far off.

Theatrics help with awe. Tomes rising out of chests with menacing slowness, all by themselves, and opening as eerie glows kindle about their pages, said pages turning by themselves as deep, booming voices speak from those same books, demanding to know who disturbs them.

Voices that speak suddenly out of empty air to herald the awakening of magic. For example: “Ah, more intruders. Let the deaths begin.”

Another way of making magic feel special and more precious is to keep it scarce. Or needing as a focus or consumed component in its castings something rare (the grave-dust or a bone from the grave of a truly good person, or a dead mage) or valuable (a gem of a certain type, size, and flawlessness). Or draining the life-force of the caster or a slave or pet or willing third party. Or leaving the caster vulnerable, by rendering them unconscious or physically weak, or revealing one of their most precious memories, for every spell cast, as vivid holographic moving images in midair, brightly glowing, for everyone on the scene to see.

Magic should have a cost. Perhaps not a price in coins, but it must be paid for. My players will not soon forget the wrinkled old near-skeleton who sat on her throne shrouded in cobwebs—until they approached, and she cast a spell that flung open many doors that her courtiers were hurled through unwillingly, into her presence. Courtiers who began to shrivel into lifeless husks with every spell she cast—‘hung,’ waiting spells unleashed by a lone word each—as she grew younger and more alive and vigorous with each casting, the adventurers suffered under the clawing damages of her magics, and her court died around her to pay for it all. The thief of the party had hopes that she could be outlasted; the party could run her out of courtiers to drain. Hopes that were dashed when the floor beneath the heroes’ boots opened up to dump them into caverns below where dragons were magically chained—dragons that withered even as they attacked the PCs, their life-force stolen by the queen on her throne above.

The throne, of course, was itself magical, and in the end soared into the skies to enable her escape from the adventurers, to scheme and ready herself for their next meeting.

The awe came back then, when the queen’s magic whisked dead dragon after dragon aloft to follow her. The thief wanted to grab and ride the last one, to go along, but the rest of the PCs were a trifle saner, and grabbed him and held him back.

So I could dole out more awe, on a game night to come.
 
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Ed Greenwood

Ed Greenwood

Forgotten Realms Creator

FireLance

Legend
Great. So the wizard gets to do seven awesome things before breakfast and the best the fighter can hope for is for the DM to say, "Okay, you cut his head off, I guess." when he gets a crit.

Hard pass.
 

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pemerton

Legend
Great. So the wizard gets to do seven awesome things before breakfast and the best the fighter can hope for is for the DM to say, "Okay, you cut his head off, I guess." when he gets a crit.

Hard pass.
Well, isn't the key here to let the fighter also enage the fiction? This was one of the (many) strong things about 4e: because powers are a stable, commensurable resource across classes, the GM can adjudicate a player's use of his/her fighter's powers to engage the fiction just as can be done for a wizard.

I think it's in the nature of the respective fictions that a fighter's contributions are likely to be physical and immediate rather than flagrantly supernatural, but that shouldn't matter given how important the physical is in typical D&D fiction (emulating heroic fantasy in this respect).

EDIT: combat is to some extent the least promising starting point for thinking about this in the D&D context, because D&D mechanics - at least the 4e ones that I have in mind, but I think 3e and 5e also - impose many more constraints around how combat action resolution is narrated than around out-of-combat.
 

Fenris-77

Small God of the Dozens
Supporter
Fighters are a free as anyone else to narrate their successes and failures beyond just rolling the dice. Fight scenes in novels are cool, fight scenes in RPGs can be that cool.
 

pemerton

Legend
Fighters are a free as anyone else to narrate their successes and failures beyond just rolling the dice. Fight scenes in novels are cool, fight scenes in RPGs can be that cool.
If the action resolution supports it. in this respect I'd contrast (say) 4e D&D or (from a completely different perspective) Prince Valiant with (say) Tunnels & Trolls or AD&D.
 

I tend to ask my players to describe what their spells look like, and they are free to add their own flavor to it. Npc's and monsters will also react realistically to scary looking spells. That is how I add the awe back in magic.
 

Fenris-77

Small God of the Dozens
Supporter
If the action resolution supports it. in this respect I'd contrast (say) 4e D&D or (from a completely different perspective) Prince Valiant with (say) Tunnels & Trolls or AD&D.
That's a fair point. You can still narrate action from a binary result system and a damage roll though, it's just perhaps more work than some other systems that give you more to work with. 5E certainly doesn't give you a lot of intuitive tools in that regard due to the levels of abstraction involved in the combat mechanics.
 




pemerton

Legend
I tend to ask my players to describe what their spells look like, and they are free to add their own flavor to it. Npc's and monsters will also react realistically to scary looking spells. That is how I add the awe back in magic.
That's a fair point. You can still narrate action from a binary result system and a damage roll though, it's just perhaps more work than some other systems that give you more to work with.
I personally think it's a weakness in a RPG to rely on free description/narration to generate the action, momentum and drama of action resolution.

That's what the mechanics are for, in my view. To drive the action.
 

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