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.
Actually, I'd argue Conjuration feels way more present than the stats suggest. Every other necromancer hideout or Daedric shrine crawl shoves summoned scamps and clanfear at you. The whole main plot revolves around Mehrunes Dagon's gates – that's Conjuration on a divine scale.
Destruction's flashy, but Conjuration defines the game's atmosphere. Oblivion planes themselves are basically a conjured realm. Mages specializing in that school might be fewer in raw NPC count, but their impact on the world's texture is huge. Even non-mage characters end up dealing with summoned creatures constantly.
Mysticism's weirdly underrepresented for a school all about manipulation of magic itself. Most NPCs with it just cast detect life or soul trap. Felt like a placeholder for cooler concepts they never fully built out.
The colleges push different specialties – Destruction at the Imperial City Arcane University, Illusion in Bruma, but everyone dabbles. You mostly notice what kills you, so destruction sticks. Restoration's common among non-mage NPCs oddly, like guards and priests. Makes the world feel lived-in.
2026-07-10 17:47:07
5
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Mage of Wolves
Bella Moondragon
9.6
102.9K
My parents have been keeping a secret from me my entire life. It wasn't until the day before my 17th birthday that I discovered the truth of who--or should I say what--I am.When two wolves showed up outside my window, it was just the beginning of the revelation that would bring me to my destiny. I, Harlow Nightingale, am not an ordinary teenage girl. Rather, I am the newest in a long line of women spanning back hundreds of years with a specific task--to guard the wolves of this legendary pack and keep their secret shifting abilities safe from the world. Now, another pack has surfaced, one that wants my wolves dead. Will I be able to develop my powers quickly enough to keep my pack safe and protected?No matter who I thought I was before, my life is different now, and I must learn to live this magical life as the Mage of Wolves.
Kael Draven is destined to rule the nation’s strongest pack, bound by duty and a betrothal to Seraphine Vale, Moonridge Academy’s golden Luna-in-training.
But fate doesn’t care about rules.
The moment Elara— the new scholarship, quiet, human, and supposedly powerless girl steps onto campus, everything shifts, Protocols shatter. Kael’s wolf claims her. And Elara begins unlocking secrets that should’ve stayed buried… including a prophecy tied to a lost royal bloodline.
She shouldn’t have lasted a day.
Now she might change everything.
But Seraphine the betrothed Luna won’t give up her crown without a fight. And when black magic comes into play, Elara must face more than just destiny, she must survive it.
Will she rise and claim what’s hers?
Or be destroyed before the truth sets her free?
after the Integration Accords were signed in the summer of 2031. a Turing point . The supernatural communities go public. After the war with the swarm the Supernaturals helped save the world treaties we're signed Celeste Valentina Morau and her team were heros mainstream schools started hosting supernaturals and then there were the supernatural schools that started letting humans attend like Aerie Academy later renamed Storm Academy in Utah was the first to integrate followed by Mooncrest Academy in Baton Rouge and BludHeaven Academy In Santa Cruiz followed suit then all the human schools. But this is my story because I just completed high school I'm now living in a abandoned building. but I just received an application form from BludHeaven Academy My name is Nico Black my parents died when i was a baby. raised in foster care abusive foster parents.the loser kid covered in scars bullied in school. I hated my life. And didnt care anymore. I looked at the application letter from BludHeaven the 13 major vampire families left earth in secret to continue to live in solitude so the vampire population on earth was much lower now so now they were looking to take on human mates the bloodmate board is the school wide system for ranking top candidates to date the legendary pure blood Vampires the shadow guard protect the campus and make sure that students stay safe some are humans familiars. the application asked why I wanted to join the school I wrote down I got nothing to lose. It asked what I could provide the school if I had any skills or talents. I put down I'll do anything you want even if it kills me don't know know if that's a skill or talent.
My application was accepted I received my acceptance letter.
Welcome to the Seven Magics Academy world! Fifteen-year-old Snow White believes she's an ordinary teen. She attends Salem Academy. Hangs with her best friends. Crushes on a cute boy. And does her best not to trip over her shoelaces. Everything changes when she's bitten by a Hunter. Suddenly her world is filled with supernaturals, including vampires, witches, dragons, gargoyles, unicorns, and more. But all Snow wants is her first kiss and possibly a date to her birthday party - that is, if she doesn't kill him first.
The first waves of attacks have finally subsided, and both the Independent States and the kingdom outside the walls are recovering from their devastating losses. In the meantime, another battle is about to begin without their knowledge; will they succumb to their foes' godly nature, or will they rise above their fate and conquer their future?
THIS IS THE SECOND INSTALLMENT OF THE BOOK SERIES: MAGE WARS
MANAGING MAGES:
Hawk had been tormenting me as long as I could remember.
I was a young mage and my power was still growing. But they thrust me under his watch in the service to our Warlord. And damn him for enjoying every moment he can torment me.
Every time I think my power strong enough to challenge him, he finds new ways to torture me.
He's told me that I'm his little prey and he'll be kinder when I succumb to him but I've vowed to never let the overbearing, insufferable cad put a hand on my bare skin.
It's a battle of wills and wits. He may be more clever but I'm certainly more stubborn!
But one thing I've learned about Hawk, never underestimate his conniving...I should've known better than to challenge him.
After all, he's made a name for himself by his skill in Managing Mages. But beyond him there is an even bigger problem. Warlord: The Commander of the Mage's Guild. A ruthless killer who leaves a dark mist in his wake.
Escaping the Mage's Guild would mean challenging Warlord himself. A dangerous endeavor.
WARLORD'S WARD
He came into our village like a shadow.
A Dark Mage with the most powerful magic in all the realm. King Detry merely calls him Warlord.
And he owns that title. Leaving wreckage in his wake.
But for me, he had other plans. His cutting blue eyes seeing straight through my disguise.
As his slave, his mere plaything, I'll learn the true darkness of magic without conscience.
Anything he wants of me, he takes. Anything he wants me to do. I am willed to do with the flick of his hand.
His power is an all consuming whirlwind. And I'm just the pretty butterfly caught in it.
Mages in 'Oblivion' manipulate fate through sheer specialization, but it's a double-edged sword. Sure, locking down a school like Destruction or Mysticism makes you terrifyingly effective in that one area. You can decide a battle before it starts with a well-placed Weakness to Magic spell, or just trap a soul from a distance. But the system punishes you for branching out. My pure Illusionist couldn't light a candle with a Flames spell to save his life. Your fate becomes this hyper-focused lane, and straying from it feels like swimming upstream. The magic doesn't feel like limitless possibility; it feels like choosing your prison early and then decorating the walls.
That said, the real control comes from enchantment. Crafting your own gear with custom spell effects is where you truly write your own ticket. Need to be permanently invisible? Slap a Chameleon enchantment on enough items. Want to never run out of magicka? Fortify Intelligence and Willpower. The game's systems let you break its own rules if you know how to combine alchemy, enchanting, and spellmaking. My last character was essentially a god who never entered combat, just paralyzed everything and soul-trapped it from the shadows. Fate wasn't something that happened to him; he was the admin of the simulation.
But let's be real, most of my 'control' involved quick-saving before every sketchy summoning ritual or major spell purchase.
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.
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.