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Dumais Wells. Exactly! Goog summary too.
So, picture the most stereotyped kinds of battle magic. We're talking magic missiles and fireballs and that sort of thing. Has this ever been done well? In terms of sensible battlefield tactics (before firearms). I'd be interested to see references. I would exclude any super-soldier types of the sort Steve Erikson has. I'm talking regular infantry and cavalry with battle mages added.
Do such mages render regular army irrelevant? Relegated to guarding the camp or maybe serving as reserves? Or is there a place for genuine, mutually beneficial combat deployment? It struck me as I try to develop my own ideas about battlefield magic that I've read very few books that really use this. Even Tolkien barely has magic in his set pieces. There's the army of the dead and the Ringwraiths at Pelennor Fields, but not much else. Mostly just monsters. GRRM uses the magic fireworks at Kings Landing, but much of the rest is again regular folks fighting in regular ways. There's little evidence of actual military evolution taking account of magical power.
Looking forward to replies on this.
So, picture the most stereotyped kinds of battle magic. We're talking magic missiles and fireballs and that sort of thing. Has this ever been done well? In terms of sensible battlefield tactics (before firearms). I'd be interested to see references. I would exclude any super-soldier types of the sort Steve Erikson has. I'm talking regular infantry and cavalry with battle mages added.
Do such mages render regular army irrelevant? Relegated to guarding the camp or maybe serving as reserves? Or is there a place for genuine, mutually beneficial combat deployment? It struck me as I try to develop my own ideas about battlefield magic that I've read very few books that really use this. Even Tolkien barely has magic in his set pieces. There's the army of the dead and the Ringwraiths at Pelennor Fields, but not much else. Mostly just monsters. GRRM uses the magic fireworks at Kings Landing, but much of the rest is again regular folks fighting in regular ways. There's little evidence of actual military evolution taking account of magical power.
Looking forward to replies on this.
I made it a capital offense to directly cause harm with magic for exactly this reason. Battle magic is a can of worms, and it renders any other weapon obsolete.
The big thing hanging me up on my third book is that the Big Bad has a school teaching wizards to use their magic to inflict harm, literally creating battle mages. The climactic battlefield scene, with several combined armies against a company-sized element of battle mages, is proving extremely difficult to write, much less write well. I may have written myself into a corner.
When I get it figured out, I'll let you know.
Artillery, and now air strikes, are the main weapons that kill soldiers in modern wars. But killing soldiers is never the true goal. You can destroy bases and strongholds and severely reduce the number of soldiers manning them, but then what? If you want to make use of a position or make sure the enemy is not using it, you always have to have soldiers go there and actually take the place.I heard it described somewhere that the role of artillery is to take a position, but it takes infantry to actually hold it. It seems to me like it'd be pretty easy to slot battle mages in as effectively artillery units.
If you have mages throwing huge fireballs, I think large field battles would disappear quite quickly.
Do such mages render regular army irrelevant?
Powder mage books. They have some powerful dudes. But when they get shot from a mile and half off, fat lot of good their magic does them.> What is a traditional mage battle?
Do you know of any in published works? I don't have any problem thinking up possibilities and scenarios. I'm interested in how those scenarios actually get written. As I said above, I've mostly come up empty.
I promise I'll put forward my own thoughts, but I wanted to hear from others first.
>I tend to not read books with battle mages, or I've just avoided them accidentally. I don't think its' been a conscious choice.
That's part of what got me thinking about this. In discussions, one can find an unending stream of people sort of dismissing battle mages (I use the term in a generic way to cover all uses of magic on a field of battle) out of hand. Fireballs, and all that. Yet, when I look at what I have read, I can recall very few examples. And that made me wonder, is this an area that could be explored?
Well of course it can. In that spirit, I appreciate the reference to Eddings. Belgariad is somewhere in my distant past; I might have to take another look there.