There's probably a reason that Odin took a hand in making the council, and it's worth considering all the counterplay involved in situations like this. Sure focus down the wizards. What happens when they decide to hit back? Or when those resources you diverted give the other factions fighting you space to push their respective fronts?Given that it takes centuries to train a wizard, and the White Council's lack of aggression in recruitment, they would have been whittled down a long time ago.
That they havent says that, just like their advanced healing, there's more to them than meets the eye
Besides Outsiders are supposed to have a limited reach and force projection on Earth. They can't exactly exercise their forces as they would want to. They've got to get past the Gates first and after that they're on the clock because pretty much nobody will tolerate them (the Red Court are idiots) and getting rid of Outsiders isn't a Starborn only thing.If this suddenly became a common problem then wizards would carry around tools or otherwise devise spells to deal with it. There's no need to give them new secondary powers that never show up in the series.
Against something like the Outsiders, where attrition doesnt really appear to be something they worry about, and plans can span decades or centuries? Thats just the cost of business, and they're at a favorable exchange rate anyway compared to events at the Outer Gates.There's probably a reason that Odin took a hand in making the council, and it's worth considering all the counterplay involved in situations like this. Sure focus down the wizards. What happens when they decide to hit back? Or when those resources you diverted give the other factions fighting you space to push their respective fronts?
The wizards aren't pushovers and their style of fighting is a real pain in the ass to deal with if you haven't forced them out of their hidey holes yet.
If this suddenly became a common problem then wizards would carry around tools or otherwise devise spells to deal with it. There's no need to give them new secondary powers that never show up in the series.
Limited is relative. That still allows for significant numbers to sneak across.Besides Outsiders are supposed to have a limited reach and force projection on Earth. They can't exactly exercise their forces as they would want to. They've got to get past the Gates first and after that they're on the clock because pretty much nobody will tolerate them (the Red Court are idiots) and getting rid of Outsiders isn't a Starborn only thing.
[X]Yog
Plenty of people tolerate Outsiders, or have no power to force the issue.Cold Days c42 said:I turned my eyes front and felt them widen.
We had arrived at Demonreach—and the island was under attack.
The first thing I saw was the curtain wall around the island's shoreline. It was nothing but a flicker of opalescent light, like a dense aurora borealis, stretching from the water's edge up into the October sky. It cast an eerie glow over the trees of the island, steeping them in menacing black shadow, and its reflection in the waters of the lake was three or four times bigger and more colorful than it should have been.
As the Hunt rushed closer, I could make out other details, too. There was a small fleet of boats surrounding the island—it looked like something out of WWII's Pacific theater. Some of the boats were modest recreational models, several at least the size of the Water Beetle, and three looked like tugboat-barge units, the kind that could ferry twenty loaded train cars around the lake.
I could see motion in the waters around the shore. Things were swarming up out of the lake, hideous and fascinating—hundreds of them. They smashed into Demonreach's curtain wall. Light pulsed in liquid concentric circles where they touched it, and shrieks of alien agony stretched the air toward a breaking point. The waters within twenty feet of the shore bubbled and thrashed in a demonic frenzy.
I felt a pulse of power stir in the air, and a bolt of sickly green energy lashed across the waters and slammed into the curtain wall. The entire wall dimmed for a second, but then resurged as the island resisted the attack. I tracked the bolt back to the barge and saw a figure in a weird, writhing cloak standing on the deck, facing the island—Sharkface.
As I watched, I saw a Zodiac boat carrying a team of eight men in dark clothing rush in toward the shore. The man in the nose of the boat lifted something to his shoulder, there was a loud foomp, and a fire blossomed in the brush, burning with an eye-searing chemical brilliance. Then the Zodiac whirled and rushed back out again, as if to escape a counterstrike—or maybe they just didn't want to stay anywhere close to waters full of piranhalike frenzied Outsiders while sitting in a rubber boat. Half a dozen other boats were doing the same thing, and several other similar craft were sitting still, full of armed men waiting silently for the chance to land onshore.
I stared in shock. The recent rain meant that the island wasn't likely to burst into flame anytime soon, but I had utterly underestimated the scope of tonight's conflict, ye gods and little fishes. This wasn't just a ritual spell.
This was an all-out amphibious assault, my very own miniature war.
My read on that is that the Outsiders snuck in quite a bit more than they would typically be able too for an all out high reward high risk (in terms of loosing limited assets) attack.Limited is relative. That still allows for significant numbers to sneak across.
In Cold Days there were several hundred Outsiders and one Great Walker at Demonreach, in addition to their mortal/semi-mortal acolytes
Not really, human wizards have been increasing in number constantly, like thats a huge issue.Thats just the cost of business, and they're at a favorable exchange rate anyway compared to events at the Outer Gates.
Number of humans with magical talents is increasing constantly. Number of wizards right now gone down the drain what with the war against the Red Court and the fact that they were being incredibly conservative with their recruitment for centuries. It's a point in the books where Harry tries to make White Council work with minor talents and sometimes even points out that they probably should reorganize their recruitment practices. Because their numbers are nowhere even close to enough.Not really, human wizards have been increasing in number constantly, like thats a huge issue.
Does the White Council really have that great a monopoly on wizards? That's honestly super impressive.Number of humans with magical talents is increasing constantly. Number of wizards right now gone down the drain what with the war against the Red Court and the fact that they were being incredibly conservative with their recruitment for centuries. It's a point in the books where Harry tries to make White Council work with minor talents and sometimes even points out that they probably should reorganize their recruitment practices. Because their numbers are nowhere even close to enough.
There are something like a thousand wizards for the whole world.
Well they do kill people who unknowingly violate their laws of magic.
It's still maintaining worldwide enforcement when most people don't even believe that they exist*. Have they ever just considered leaving a note on all the dead bodies detailing the laws of magic? Even if most people don't believe in magic I don't think that ignorance of the laws would last.Well they do kill people who unknowingly violate their laws of magic.
Thats just an organisational issue. If they were being constantly attritioned down they would stop doing apprenticeship and then just start mass training wizards.Number of humans with magical talents is increasing constantly. Number of wizards right now gone down the drain what with the war against the Red Court and the fact that they were being incredibly conservative with their recruitment for centuries. It's a point in the books where Harry tries to make White Council work with minor talents and sometimes even points out that they probably should reorganize their recruitment practices. Because their numbers are nowhere even close to enough.
There are something like a thousand wizards for the whole world.
Supposedly White Council used Romans as their battering ram to wreck or subsume most other traditions and organizations around. And then did the same with European colonization riding on the wave of it. It worked until it didn't. Like with many successful organizations and empires. With the war against Red Court they will now either adapt or die.Does the White Council really have that great a monopoly on wizards? That's honestly super impressive.
No, you're mistaken.Not really, human wizards have been increasing in number constantly, like thats a huge issue.
No way outsiders can out attrition human population growth.
Yes. Its self-protection.Does the White Council really have that great a monopoly on wizards? That's honestly super impressive.
They kill people who break the Laws of Magic.Well they do kill people who unknowingly violate their laws of magic.
Carlos Ramirez is literally the Warden commander for the western United States, and was made this after Dead BeatThats just an organisational issue. If they were being constantly attritioned down they would stop doing apprenticeship and then just start mass training wizards.
Its genuinely crazy they haven't massively expanded with the population. I guess change takes time when led by a bunch of centigenarians.
The outsiders are a threat, but they aren't infinite inside reality and if they could do this casually then they could also use other things to accomplish the same goal.Against something like the Outsiders, where attrition doesnt really appear to be something they worry about, and plans can span decades or centuries? Thats just the cost of business, and they're at a favorable exchange rate anyway compared to events at the Outer Gates.
Never said it was but running around with swords and killing people over supposed laws that a lot of magic users never heard of until a Warden came knocking on their door may have the side-effect of discouraging other Wizard organizations from forming.They kill people who break the Laws of Magic.
Not joining the Council isnt one of the Laws. There's pressure, but its not mandatory.
Thats just every year, that shit adds up massively because they don't age. 100 billion people have died in history.If you use his Word of Jim numbers, given that modern birth rates appear to average around 140 million new births each year, that means that the maximum potential number of new wizards globally is 140. BEFORE losses from everything from childhood mortality to "was eaten by a grue."
Thats just a skill issue, pedagogy and teaching has advanced massively in that time period as well.The lead time to competent wizardry is just long by the standards of the population explosion that industrialization has caused
Thats just a skill issue, pedagogy and teaching has advanced massively in that time period as well.
The wizard still do apprenticeship as a major component.