Talk:Wizard (Dungeons & Dragons)

Latest comment: 3 months ago by 204.116.209.29 in topic Two D&D?

Wizard Magic edit

One group I knew found the memorization limits of the second edition too limited, so what happened is all magic levels that could be memorized were treated as spell points to apply to any spell by level. By example, a wizard with five first level points would be able to cast any five first level spells known (instead of memorizing five specific spells). This was actually discovered by a misreading of the rules, and one guy had a cleric the could heal a lot and we stared, but he was applying the points different and this version gave the cleric a distinct advantage as the cleric was simply blessed with spell knowledge while the wizard needed to learn the spell--clerics are normally weak characters without much combat ability and their power comes from healing, and without healing, then the cleric is weak wizard. Historically recognized priests are supposed to be well connected with the higher powers, so I do not find this unusual, and healing is a Christian thing to make a distinction from sorcery that is forbidding in the Bible (Moses brought the plagues, commanded the snakes, commanded the frogs, commanded the water to turn putrid for an entire river and wells, commanded the flies, commanded the lighting and hail that destroyed the wheat and not the barley, parted a river so an entire tribe could pass, brought water from stone, was given prophecy of events to come by higher powers, brought holy bread to the desert, fed the tribe with editable birds that just landed on them, One ancient prophet with God caused an arm to wither and become useless until God's command was followed, God grew a grape vine over Jonah within a short time to give shelter for a day, Jesus healed any problem of the body, Jesus walked on water, Jesus fed the thousands by some kind of breaking of a few loaves of bread and fish twice, Jesus calmed the storm, Jesus knew how to find fish while fishing, Jesus cast out the demons, Jesus raised the dead, Jesus turned clay birds into real birds (by one account still used outside of the United States), Jesus was tended to by Angels after surviving the desert in starvation and thirst for thirty days (he was healed), Jesus was able to bless his followers with his powers (with the special requirement that they must be righteous), Jesus had his followers shake their sandals at towns that were unforgiving for the desert to swallow them up, Jesus would encountered the devil who would tempt Jesus with ultimate power and reject the devil) and after all this Christians rejected sorcery as something of the flesh while giving righteousness and living by the Sprit with a potential of Spiritual Gifts that mundane to power of God (there is more). There are examples for clerics.

  • ... Thu hell does that all have to do with wizards and magic?

Delusional Mages? edit

Where are the rules for wizards becoming delusional if they go too long without resting? -- Raveled

It was probably a house rule.--SeizureDog (talk) 11:08, 25 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am confident it was a house rule. I am quite familiar with all editions, and there was never a rule along these lines in any of the core books. Turlo Lomon (talk) 02:43, 25 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Other literary influences edit

I think the influence of The Compleat Enchanter stories should be included, as it's clear the sympathetic magic-style spell component system is drawn from those stories. Kakashi64 (talk) 17:51, 8 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Except that The Compleat Enchanter was published a year after Dungeons & Dragons was published. Not sure how you can say it was the inspiration for something before that date. Turlo Lomon (talk) 02:36, 25 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
Additional thoughts. The Compleat Enchanter was based on works from 1940s and 50s. However, Dungeons & Dragons clearly stated The Dying Earth as the origin of the magic system. If you read that book, you would clearly see how exact the magic system is to that particuliar book. I haven't read The Compleat Enchanter, so I can't give a accurate comparison. Turlo Lomon (talk) 03:00, 25 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Future refs edit

[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] - Peregrine Fisher (talk) (contribs) 02:44, 27 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Common specialist-archetypes? edit

IMO this section could use some major cleanup.

  • The Beguiler section describes an alternate class from 3.5e's PHBII. IMO they're far closer to rogues with magic than specialist wizards (also, they're sponteneous casters like bards and sorcerers). Maybe we could shoehorn it into the rogue or bard article in some sort of "similar classes" section.
  • The Duskblade is another class from 3.5e's PHBII. IMO they're closer to spellcasting fighters than specialist wizards (also, they're spontaneous casters like sorcerers and bards). I don't know where to put this info. Maybe a separate article for swordmages, hexblades, duskblades and other miscellaneous fighter-wizard hybrid classes? Maybe shoehorn it into the bard article because bards are a jack of all trades class, or shoehorn it into the sorcerer article because 3.5e sorcerers are spontaneous casters and 4e sorcerers have some melee builds?
  • The Necromancer section describes specific traits of the Dread Necromancer class from 3.5e's Heroes of Horror (such as spontenous casting, the secondary focus on divination magic and the looser armour restrictions) as if they were common traits of D&D necromancers.
  • Summoners are wizards who specialize in the Conjuration / Summoning school, I don't know where this stuff about Transmutation magic is coming from.
  • The Warmage section describes the traits of a specific 3.5e alternate class as if they were universal traits of a broader character achetype. Maybe we could move it to the sorcerer article in some kind of "similar classes" or "related classes" section or something.

It could also use some more info on common / prominent types of specialist wizards and wizard variants besides necromancers and summoners, such as illusionists, evokers and elementalists. -- Gordon Ecker, WikiSloth (talk) 03:14, 4 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

That section should probably be removed entirely as WP:OR unless we can get some sources that specifically tie them as subclasses of one class or another, or what have you. Looking at the section immediately above this one, I wonder if we could make some use of those refs to improve this article the way the DnD Dwarf was improved not long ago. 24.12.74.21 (talk) 03:19, 4 June 2013 (UTC)Reply
The Duskblade itself does not even have that many Abjuration spells (only 8, he does have 20 Trasmutation spells and 17 Evocation spells). At most we could create a Classes(D&D 3.0/3.5) or a Casters(D&D 3.0/3.5) article that list the casters variants.--2.38.153.8 (talk) 15:34, 16 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

Two D&D? edit

Why are there two sections in the article both labeled D&D,both before and after AD&D. As well the second section dosent really provide any information that isn't already in the article or couldn't be added under another section. 204.116.209.29 (talk) 15:36, 22 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Someone removed the publication dates several years ago, and it made a bit more sense when those were included. See what I mean here:[14] BOZ (talk) 23:25, 22 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
Then why havent they been returned yet? 204.116.209.29 (talk) 18:29, 24 January 2024 (UTC)Reply