Jack Vance: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "'''Jack Vance''' is an Appendix N author, which is to say required reading for the Dungeons & Dragons system. Most famed for the Dying Earth series which he'd inherite..."
 
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Among /tg/, Vance pioneered the notion that magic is a tool usable by any adventuring party, rather than (as Smith) a ritual likely to run one's soul therefore fit only for NPCs. That meant magic needed at least to pay a respectful nod to the Thermodynamics. (His books also demand that his mages, like [[GM]]s today, learn mathematics.) Hence: [[Vancian Casting]], where the mage must learn a fixed number of spells per day and then fire them off.
Among /tg/, Vance pioneered the notion that magic is a tool usable by any adventuring party, rather than (as Smith) a ritual likely to run one's soul therefore fit only for NPCs. That meant magic needed at least to pay a respectful nod to the Thermodynamics. (His books also demand that his mages, like [[GM]]s today, learn mathematics.) Hence: [[Vancian Casting]], where the mage must learn a fixed number of spells per day and then fire them off.


[[Category: Authors]]
[[Category: Writers]]

Revision as of 17:55, 1 February 2021

Jack Vance is an Appendix N author, which is to say required reading for the Dungeons & Dragons system. Most famed for the Dying Earth series which he'd inherited from Clark Ashton Smith's Zothique.

Among /tg/, Vance pioneered the notion that magic is a tool usable by any adventuring party, rather than (as Smith) a ritual likely to run one's soul therefore fit only for NPCs. That meant magic needed at least to pay a respectful nod to the Thermodynamics. (His books also demand that his mages, like GMs today, learn mathematics.) Hence: Vancian Casting, where the mage must learn a fixed number of spells per day and then fire them off.