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#21 |
Join Date: Mar 2008
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I did a similar magic starts working in the modern world campaign years ago. I had things like Amish/Pennsylvania Dutch hex signs they put on barns for luck start working among other mild effects.
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#22 | |
Join Date: Jul 2005
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#23 |
Join Date: Jul 2005
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One big problem for researchers into sorcery is that magical rituals have both objective and subjective components. Let’s take the classic demon summoning: the mandatory elements are a protective diagram, candles, incense and appropriate ritual attire. However, which protective diagram, what sort of candles, which incense or incense blend and what specific ritual attire will vary between practitioners. Some do work objectively better than others: silver in the diagram and ammonia-scented candles help, bronze candlesticks or a golden amulet would hinder.
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#24 | |
Join Date: Oct 2024
Location: There's a head attached to my neck and I'm in it
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Having objectively superior options isn't that fun. But different viable options are (of course it's subjective, just my opinion) Would lead to very interesting magic styles, I suppose. Or solid magic system.
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I'm probably overthinking. |
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#25 | |
Join Date: Jul 2005
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#26 |
Join Date: Jun 2008
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3 seems most realistic...and the funniest. A chaotic response by a bunch of different agencies, while Congress holds hearings and certain groups argue that because magic is potentially a weapon, it can't be regulated at all.
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#27 | |
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Brazil
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One department of notice would be of the Secret Service, with "Warlocks" specially trained to protect presidents and former presidents and candidates and similar high profile targets |
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#28 |
Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: Brazil
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I think that what would be most interesting would be the things outside governments, both legal and illegal. The many laws regarding magic would wildly vary between borders, each nation would have their own regulations, and that would greatly change the way that businesses behave and the global geopolitics at large. Highly corrupt third world nations would become havens of illicit magic activity; I can see China and Russia being at the forefront of those, however in China it would be a lot more regulated and restricted and directed towards using against the enemies of the CCP - namely, against the US at first, then Japan, India, Taiwan, Vietnam and South Korea, in that order, while Russia would become the paradise of criminal magic in the world, including even clandestine magic schools for mobs. Criminal organizations worldwide will pay good money for experts in that area, but they may also be willing to pay the education of many students - here in Brazil were I live, we have the PCC, our biggest Mafia, and they pay for students to go to law school to become lawyers, prosecutors and even judges, so you can be sure that many Mafias would pay the education of aspiring wizards
Corporations, Universities and some non-governmental will also be interested in study, use and profit from magic, which means that governments that try to forbid or control it too tightly will incentivize many businesses to relocate for more permissive nations. Global terrorism is yet another geopolitical factor to consider. Organizations like Al Qaeda or Isis would be very interested in harnessing this source of power, thus it would boil down to how can they achieve it. Terrorist groups are different from organized crime however, because these are ideological ones unlike the crime mafias, thus there's plenty of magic that would be a no-no if it goes against their ideology; heck, certain magic activities may even become the direct targets of terrorist groups. Anything that goes against Sharia Law would be a big no no for Isis and Al Qaeda for instance, while "Financial Magic" could become the direct targets of Marxist terrorist groups. Last edited by KarlKost; 12-26-2024 at 04:32 PM. |
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#29 |
Night Watchman
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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In the occult WWII campaign, 2) was the first choice. This decision was made by the British government in 1944, by which time many of the usual peacetime political preoccupations and interests had ceased to seem very relevant after five years of war. There's an article describing their plan, "The organisation and regulation of magic in the post-war world", in issue #1 of The Path of Cunning. See the link in my signature.
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The Path of Cunning. Indexes: DFRPG Characters, Advantage of the Week, Disadvantage of the Week, Skill of the Week, Techniques. |
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#30 | |
Join Date: Jun 2013
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Authoritarian vs Libertarian would match up better, however - authoritarians are going to be opposed to civilian access to magic just like they are to civilian access to firearms (but will happily incorporate both for their own use), while libertarians are going to be in favor of both (or at least opposed to restrictions place on them by the government, which works out to roughly the same thing).
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ritual path magic, setting building |
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