Interesting by
Matt Cipher
on 2015-04-22 19:35:00 UTC
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Yes, I am quite familiar with FMA, and using their Alchemy could be an interesting challenge. I have never played any Dragon Age games, so this would require a lot more research from me.
If I remember correctly, all you need to perform Kido is an incantation and enough amount of Spirit Energy. Anyway, I do have some experience in creating magic users, so I can give you a short description about the continua I've mentioned:
Warlocks from The Mortal Instruments are usually the offspring of a mortal and a demon from Hell. They are not the only magic users in their continuum (the other species practicing magic openly are faeries), but they are probably the most numerous. They have characteristic markings on their body, which indicates their heritage (usually something connecting them to their demon parent - additional finger, horns, different skin colour, etc.). Warlocks are also immortal - but NOT unkillable. At a certain point, they just stop aging. There can be born warlocks with no magic powers (similar to Squibs from HP). The only problem with their magic is, it is too versatile - the Author didn't explain it enough, nor focused on its limitations.
Magic in The Secrets of Immortal Nicolas Flamel comes from an energy source called Aura - every human has a certain amount of it, in their bodies. The Aura can be activated through the ritual known as the Awakening - it can only be done by a selected few member of the Elder race (sort of god-like figures of the continuum). After the Awakening (which doesn't always work), the human is capable of learning magic. The most basic form is the Elemental Manipulation, which divides into well-known RPG categories: Fire, Water, Air, and Earth Magic. More advanced techniques involve Necromancy, Scrying, Shapeshifting, or - in extreme cases - Time Magic. The weakness I see here: Aura is used quite quickly, and there is a variety of creatures immune to it, or able to absorb it. Replenishing the Aura also takes quite some time, usually one day.
So, yeah - that's as far as I can tell you on spot. Which one seems better?