Mages might have presented the alternative of becoming a wizard, an academic spell user who relies on external objects. A more scholarly approach might have fit our professor here quite well. We haven't heard much about them in Wandering Inn, but in theory you might be able to become one even without personal magic. In terms of actionable methodology, shamans are the principle externalized magic users of the setting and often function as teachers. Druids here have offered philosophical rather than practical guidance, letting our main character reach his own conclusions and that has it's own advantages but they're not strictly better than the two alternatives would have been.I'm really glad that we ended up going to the Druids on this one. The Mage's Guild would have just said, "Stinks to be you; will that be all, slave?", but the Druids at least pointed the way to alternative routes to magic.
I'm afraid polish will not make her change her ways. She's a Slaver, her father is a Slaver, her society expects her to be a Slaver. That's why I choose love of knowledge:Even if she seems kind enough past being a noble who views String People of other cloths as lesser beings and slaves less than that, is that enough to break free of the mould society and her father has made for her? Polishing seems to me that Roger might be able to make her realize that Slaver might just be another management/merchant class and she could earn more money by hiring out people as advisors etc.
I think that's the better option if we want to make her change her ways. Letting her find by herself that slavery isn't good and go against her culture. « Something more » could mean for her « the best slaver ».
It's the Teacher imparts the lesson and does the shaping, though. Roger would see the potential for kindness in her and guides her down a other path. Get her to realize that a better way to make money is actually to do something else.I'm afraid polish will not make her change her ways. She's a Slaver, her father is a Slaver, her society expects her to be a Slaver. That's why I choose love of knowledge:
I think that's the better option if we want to make her change her ways. Letting her find by herself that slavery isn't good and go against her culture. « Something more » could mean for her « the best slaver ».
They might have, but why would they?Mages might have presented the alternative of becoming a wizard, an academic spell user who relies on external objects. A more scholarly approach might have fit our professor here quite well.
Yeah, it's pretty horrible. Thankfully we didn't end up in Roshal.[X] The love of knowledge you share and the curiosity it fosters
Focus on the idea of a Teacher as one who shares a love of knowledge and encourages their students to find their own path
Just found this and can I say? Fuck this fucking society, I eagerly await the day it burns to the ground
They might have, but why would they?
With the druids we have the fact that we helped them by teaching / doing the quest.
What reason for them to help us do we have with the wizards?
A non-magical class that can cast spells isn't unknown in TWI. There's high-level Librarians that can cast spells from books they own without being mages themselves. Getting Magical Teacher at a high enough level seems very possible. What was Erin's level when she became Magical Inkeeper?I imagine that a high level teacher(30 or so) would eventually get a skill that allows them to tutor anyone regardless of their field. So to teach a mage he'd have to get access to some kind of magic. A Magical Teacher class?
That was at lvl 30. I can't recall the conditions she met though. As a teacher one of the conditions will probably have to spend some time learning magical theory or something.A non-magical class that can cast spells isn't unknown in TWI. There's high-level Librarians that can cast spells from books they own without being mages themselves. Getting Magical Teacher at a high enough level seems very possible. What was Erin's level when she became Magical Inkeeper?
Do want to also learn about shamanism and mage guild stuff (wizard?), but seems that for druids and shaman we have plot hooks on why they should help us now. With mage guild we might work something out later in the druids quest (when the guild mages realize that this isn't just failing maybe we can get a foot in the door via "I heard the druids side of this, do you want to explain your side?")Yeah, it's pretty horrible. Thankfully we didn't end up in Roshal.
I imagine that a high level teacher(30 or so) would eventually get a skill that allows them to tutor anyone regardless of their field. So to teach a mage he'd have to get access to some kind of magic. A Magical Teacher class?
Hmm, once Roger learns of scrying orbs maybe we should mention the possibilities of remote teaching?
I LOLed at midichlorianSo there might be a genetic component to it? That sounds… mundane. Disappointing, almost, like midichlorians. And you certainly have no magic-using ancestors that you're aware of. "How would I find out?" you ask.
Kings are still cool. But definitely no gods.
Concerning gods, we shouldn't talk of gods, like at all. Gods get power from worship and from people believing in them, and rn everyone think they're dead. Except they're not, they're in the afterlife eating most of the souls that get there to gather enough power to return. Gods are evil in TWI.