4 Answers2026-07-06 15:31:04
I've always been more into the philosophical side of magic systems, and the handling of forbidden power is a huge part of that. A lot of books frame it as a control vs. corruption dilemma, where the mage's willpower is the real cage. Think 'The Name of the Wind'—the real "forbidden" stuff there isn't a specific spell but naming, and Kvothe's struggle is with obsession and pride, not just a set of rules.
Where authors often lose me is when the forbidden magic is just a tool with no inherent moral weight. If it's just a more powerful fireball that's illegal, that's boring. The best examples make the magic itself twist the user. The magic in R.F. Kuang's 'Babel' is a great parallel—it's tied to colonial exploitation, so using it is a political and ethical choice, not just a personal one.
The control mechanisms can be external, like guilds and watchful deities, but the internal conflict is what hooks me. Does the character use it anyway and rationalize it? That's where you get a Selina from the 'Vespertine' books, maybe, dancing on the edge of what's acceptable for a cause. Makes me wonder if the real forbidden magic is always the justification the mage gives themselves.
3 Answers2026-07-06 21:45:55
Elderscrolls Loreheads generally agree Destruction takes top spot, followed by Illusion, purely based on in-game NPC class lists and leveled spawn data. Playing on max difficulty, you just get swarmed by fireballs and frost atronachs from every bandit mage and conjurer dungeon delve. Restoration's high up there too – all those vigilant types and temple healers wandering Cyrodiil.
But Oblivion's scaling system kinda flattens specialization distinctions compared to Morrowind's rigid guild ranks. You'll find 'apprentice' labeled mages slinging expert-level spells because their level tag bumped their magic skills. So the 'most common' schools reflect generic enemy templates more than deep lore choices.
Still, from a pure gameplay hours standpoint, Destruction dominance checks out. Even the Mages Guild recommendation quests force you through elemental trial caves packed with flame mages.
3 Answers2026-07-06 14:32:35
Oh, the legion gets all the credit for being the big military threat, but honestly? The real grind for a mage out there is the daedra. Atronachs everywhere. You're trying to channel a nice fireball and a Storm Atronach just shrugs it off and zaps you back into next week. The magic resistance on some of those things is brutal.
And let's not forget the wildlife. It sounds silly until a pack of spriggans decides your robe looks tasty. They've got this nasty poison and they just swarm you. You're fumbling for a cure poison spell while your health is ticking down. Makes dungeon delving a constant game of 'what's around the next corner that'll laugh at my destruction magic?' My altmer illusionist had a real bad time in an Oblivion gate once because the clannfear just wouldn't calm down.
4 Answers2026-07-06 21:58:52
This question really digs into a specific gear of urban fantasy machinery. Mages who draw power from oblivion, chaos, or void-like realms create a natural pressure valve for narrative tension—they can break the rules the established magic system sets up. When your magic comes from a destructive source that's fundamentally anti-reality, any major spell becomes a potential plot bomb waiting to go off. The character isn't just risking failure; they're risking unraveling the fabric of their world. That's different from a mage who messes up a fireball and just burns down a building. It raises the stakes from personal consequence to cosmic threat in one casting.
I've seen it used as a fantastic corruption arc device. The mage starts using oblivion magic for good reasons, maybe to save someone, but each use erodes something in them or twists the outcome. The 'cost' isn't just mana or a physical toll; it's their sanity or the stability of their reality. That builds twists organically because the reader's waiting for that erosion to manifest. The twist isn't that the mage betrays everyone; it's that using the power itself was the betrayal of self, and the fallout is the twist.
It also lets authors subvert prophecy or fate in a way that feels earned. If oblivion is about unmaking destiny, then a mage tapping into it can literally rewrite a foretold event, but the aftermath is always chaotic and never what they intended. The plot twist becomes the unintended consequence of trying to avoid a different one.
3 Answers2026-07-06 15:30:40
Honestly, the whole 'glass cannon' thing for mages in Oblivion can feel a bit off if you're used to later games. My first character was a pure mage, and I spent half my time running backwards. The vulnerability isn't just about low health; it's that casting a spell roots you for a moment, and you can't block while doing it. So you're this devastating source of elemental fury, but a single wolf getting past your summons means you're eating dirt.
The balance really comes from alchemy and enchantment more than anything inherent to the class. You're forced to chug restore magicka potions like they're water, and you have to layer on sigil stone enchantments for armor or else you're just wearing rags. It creates this weird rhythm where you're either annihilating entire caves from the doorway or desperately trying to teleport away because you mismanaged your magicka pool. It's kind of a mess, but there's a weird charm to that specific brand of janky power fantasy.
You learn to abuse the environment—doorways, elevation, anything that creates a choke point. Your power is absolute control over space, but your vulnerability is that you need that space to exist.