Subject: Undoubtedly
Author:
Posted on: 2012-11-11 19:27:00 UTC

I have a lot of different types of magic and treatments of it because I write a lot of different worlds. On one world, for example, the industrial revolution and the spread of technology was largely suppressed because the magic-using upper class wouldn't invest in any manufacturing plans that would undercut the necessity of having a mage supervise manufacturing. (They've since relaxed that to the point where disposable goods, such as textiles, paper goods, childrens' toys, and the like can be produced without any magic in the process, but things like computers, washing machines, and cell phones are all very expensive since they still need to be produced partly by magic.)

In a second world, the industrial revolution is just getting started, and magic is fairly commonplace, but there are immense restrictions on ever using it on other people, because 99% of the time, messing around with someone using magic results in bloody, bloody death. There's plenty of research for spells to make things and find things and all sorts of other amusements, but attacking or defending yourself with magic is basically the equivalent of throwing lightning bolts around: somebody's gonna get fried.

And in a third world, they just finished the equivalent of world war 1, using a combination of chemical and magical weapons that left giant scars across a whole continent. The world is still adjusting to the idea that a handful of mages and enough preparation can blow up most of a city, and it's pretty clear that there will be some sort of international agreement to register mages and make sure they don't learn to blow up cities in the near future.

Yeah, so keeping the magic in all of these alternate histories in place is one thing that helps me remember which world I'm writing in.

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