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Messages - polkaneverdies

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1
There tends to be a large imbalance in the power of magic attacks vs non magic attacks. A spell slingers limited number of shots is one of the big things that "corrects" that balance.

I imagine this is why you are getting so much pushback on the idea of at least doubling their number of spells.

2
Ghost story heavily implied or outright stated, that mort was actually strong enough to count as a wizard. He had simply fudged his test results in the same manner as Elaine to avoid be long pulled into the War.
 So the Mort vs Harry example would seem to be a heavily specialized wizard compared to a generic wizard. A focused practitioner vs a generic wizard might play out differently.

3
DFRPG / Re: Technomancer
« on: June 06, 2014, 07:52:55 PM »
iirc Woj said lily was mistaken about that.

4
DFRPG / Re: Solo character creation
« on: May 18, 2014, 12:39:38 PM »
Normally the city (and to a lesser extent the character) is a collaborative effort between the players and the gm. If there is no group then there is no one to complain if you do it yourself. I would suggest you check out some of the city creation topics in the Play by Post thread.

5
It just occurred to me that you said she was the "police boss" of the area and iirc you used the standard detective stats.

Unless it is a very small area to be boss she would need to be very good at her job or very good with politics. Additionally unless she is a crappy boss she would need some effective leadership skills.  Add that together and her social skills should pretty respectable.

6
DFRPG / Re: Incite Emotion question
« on: June 13, 2013, 02:25:54 AM »
Thirded

7
DFRPG / Re: Newbies ask the darnest things
« on: June 12, 2013, 08:56:08 PM »
A couple of Woj that reference the sidhe.

Toot-Toot
2009 Lexington signing:
Q:  How big will Toot get?
A:  Depends on how much influence he has in the world.  That’s how the sidhe gain their size and power.  Mab wasn’t always as big as she is now.
2010 Bitten by Books Q&A:
#150 Is Toot-toot’s increase in size due to his actions, or the title and followers he has acquired doing Harry’s bidding?”
It’s due to /Harry’s/ actions, mostly. Toot done hitched his star to Harry’s wagon. As a result, he’s taken actions he never would have taken on his own, some of which had major consequences. Toot has effectively become a much more powerful being than he was as an independent dewdrop faerie. The physical growth is a reflection of that fact.
I mean gosh, where do you think the Sidhe came from in the first place?
2009 Kansas City Q&A @41:45
With all the things Toot Toot and the Za Lord's guard have done that made a difference, and with Toot getting bigger, is that going to upset the balance in the Summer court?
The answer is no, because they are not Summer anyway, they are wildfae.  And everybody over in summer is going to blame Harry for everything they do.  They regard them as a tool and Harry is the guy holding it.  Harry would tell you that he's probably the tool but...  Anyway Toot Toot's been growing because that's where the Sidhe came from to begin with.  They weren't always all tall and glamorous, they kind of got that way. 

8
DFRPG / Re: "Official" Perspective on Lawbreaking
« on: May 29, 2013, 07:11:50 PM »
This is a Woj that seems relevant to the discussion of "intent".


 jimbutcher
Friendly Neighborhood Writer-Man
Conversationalist

 
Posts: 346
 

Re: DF: Theories on who Cowl and Kumori really are.
« Reply #56 on: July 16, 2006, 11:50:26 AM »
Quote from: GraevD on July 09, 2006, 03:40:44 PM
  Likewise, you are attracted by a smell of pie, that's normal.  But, someone manipulates the timestream to guarantee that pie isn't the nice fresh cherry pie it was supposed to be, that's just wrong!   Heh, pies aside, my focus is on the controlling of the free will of another person, not on just changes in the environment using magic. 

Man.  The existential morality of using PIE to shape the course of reality.  GOOD or EVIL?  That's . . . one of those discussions I never really thought I'd listen in on.

Quote
"Actually, Molly's intentions when she broke that particular law twisted her."  Here's where I think you hit the nail on the head Lightsabre.  It's the intentions of the caster that matter.  Time Travel, Nercomancy, and Mind Control are all tools that can be used to do *bad* things.  I'm fairly sure what we see in the laws of magic is a sort of wizard gun control, trying to limit the existence of these problematic classes of spells.

But if the substance of the consequences of the act itself does not have its own inherent quality of good or evil, then how can the /intentions/ behind it determine a similar quality?  "Really, I was only trying to provide a better quality of life for my family and my employees.  It wasn't my intention to destroy that particular species of flower in the rain forest that cures cancer."  "I was just trying to give those Injuns some blankets.  It wasn't my intention to expose them to smallpox and wipe out hundreds of thousands of innocent people."  "I just wanted to get that book finished while working two jobs and finishing a brutal semester of grad school.  It wasn't my intention to screw up the name of Bianca's personal assistant whose death had motivated her to go all power hungry to get revenge on Harry."

There's some old chestnut about good itentions serving as base level gradiant on an expressway that goes somewhere, but I can't remember the specifics right now.    While I agree that the /intentions/ of the person taking action are not without significance, they carry far less weight than the /consequences/ of that action. 

"I meant to shoot him in the leg and wound him, not hit the femoral artery and kill him, so I should not be considered guilty of murder," is not something that stands up in a court of law /or/ in any serious moral or ethical evaluation.  You had the weapon.  You knew it was potentially lethal, even if you did attempt to use it in a less than fully lethal fashion.  (Or if you DIDN'T know that, you were a freaking idiot playing with people's lives, something really no less excuseable.)  But you chose to employ the weapon anyway.  The consequences of those actions are /yours/, your doing, regardless of how innocent your intentions may have been.

Similarly, if you meant to drill that ^@#%er through the eyes, if you had every intention of murdering him outright, but you shot him in the hand and he survived with minor injuries, again the consequences overshadow your intentions.  You might have made a stupid or morally queestionable choice, but it isn't like anyone *died* or anything.  He's fine (at least in the long term), you're fine, and there are fewer repercussions--regardless of your hideous intentions.

The exercise of power and the necessity to consider the fallout from your actions isn't something limited to wizards and gods.  Fictional people like Harry and Molly just provide more colorful examples.

As for violating the laws of magic themselves turning you good or evil, well.    There's something to be said on either side of the argument, in the strictest sense, though one side of the argument is definitely less incorrect than the other.  But it's going to take me several more books to lay it out, so there's no sense in ruining the fun.

Jim

(PS--Murphy can't be Kumori, obviously.  Kumori is a powerful and dangerous necromancer with the personal will to hold a knife to a wizard's throat.  And more to the point, she was TALL ENOUGH to do it.  If she was 5' 0" Murphy, she'd have had to be wearing freaking STILTS to hold a knife at 6' 7" Harry's throat from behind.  To say nothing of the fact that Harry has touched Murphy's skin on multiple occasions and never picked up a ripple of /any/ of the aura of a practitioner, much less the utterly obvious one of a fellow heavyweight.  I try to follow my own rules, guys.  )


9
DFRPG / Re: The First Law of Magic In-Play: Semi-Official Advice
« on: May 16, 2013, 11:57:16 AM »
The only laws violated by robbing a bank would be mortal government ones. unless you were using no creativity you wouldn't need to violate either the council laws or the metaphysical "rules of magic"

10
DFRPG / Re: WCV Powers
« on: May 15, 2013, 08:57:10 PM »
Incite emotion and emotional vampire are different powers so IMO being poor food wouldn't protect you from incite.

Edit: inserted the words "different powers"

11
I like the idea of your newly founded democracy.

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DFRPG / Re: The First Law of Magic In-Play: Semi-Official Advice
« on: May 14, 2013, 08:27:47 PM »
^ nailed it.

13
DFRPG / Re: Law Talk
« on: May 14, 2013, 05:01:59 PM »
We should avoid the touchy topic of whether or not any killing can be justified  and stick to "can it be done without breaking the law?".

Simple answer: yes to wardens might not shorten you. Ex: Dresden

No to avoiding magical smackdown. Ex: Dresden

14
DFRPG / Re: Scion Question
« on: May 14, 2013, 04:53:25 PM »
The point is that according to the rules of magic it is never the right thing to kill a mortal with magic.

It is a perversion of the energies of creation to use it to snuff out one of the "free agents" of creation. (Mortals being the group than can use "free will" to choose outside of their blueprints).

15
DFRPG / Re: "Official" Perspective on Lawbreaking
« on: May 14, 2013, 03:01:28 PM »
Boo!  Only the phrase in quotes was Jim's. The next sentence was my supposition. Still plenty of grey area to play in there. :p

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