MAGIC in fantasy, soft magic vs hard magic: FANTASY RE-ARMED

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
  • There are two types of magic in fantasy, from Lord of the Rings to Star Wars, and they are both a bit misunderstood.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4 тис.

  • @koneda22
    @koneda22 4 роки тому +1390

    First of all your book is really awesome I love the blend of classic fantasy and this steampunkish style and especially the realisticness of the worldbuilding and how the world works, but what I always wandered while reading your book is:
    How the hell does gravity in that world work? I pictured it as a big cylinder with connected portals on top and bottom but why do ppl stick to the main continent but when they fall of they just fall down towards the portal. Just a bit I wondered. Brilliant writing btw.

    • @shadiversity
      @shadiversity  4 роки тому +552

      Well the continents don't fall, they are held up by internal darkstone deposits. There's a massive slab that runs the length of the main continent called the darkstone mantle. Gravity in the universe comes from a permanent downward geodesic curve in space time ^_^

    • @LoneWolf20213
      @LoneWolf20213 4 роки тому +33

      send me a link or name of his book please

    • @koneda22
      @koneda22 4 роки тому +42

      Yes, I got the continents, just not the people on the continent :D thank you for clarification!

    • @koneda22
      @koneda22 4 роки тому +47

      @leon fierce Shad says and shows it in this video and even has a specific vid on it. Its called Shadow of the conqueror ;)

    • @LoneWolf20213
      @LoneWolf20213 4 роки тому +17

      @@koneda22thanks, missed that watching the entire video

  • @ghosturiel
    @ghosturiel 4 роки тому +2173

    “A children's story that can only be enjoyed by children is not a good children's story in the slightest.”
    - C.S.Lewis

    • @whowhatwherewhy1434
      @whowhatwherewhy1434 4 роки тому +66

      One of my all time favorite quotes

    • @darkdogzstudioz
      @darkdogzstudioz 4 роки тому +101

      Lewis knew what was up. narnia was amazing, and when you look into it, it had a surprisingly hard magic system for something written so long ago when people didnt really care about that kind of thing [eg; LOTR]

    • @giacomorinaldi8803
      @giacomorinaldi8803 4 роки тому +29

      "Sure, mate, suuuure. Tell me more about it" Philip Pullman as he writes His Dark Materials, the antithesis of everything Lewis stood for, a supposedly "book for children" with a deep, well constructed, anti-religion and anti-authoritarism message that can only be fully appreciated by adults. Oxford, 1994, colorized

    • @cheesestyx945
      @cheesestyx945 4 роки тому +11

      @@giacomorinaldi8803 Was it anti religion because Azlan always gave me God-like vibes.

    • @artemiostriantafyllou7986
      @artemiostriantafyllou7986 4 роки тому +24

      @@cheesestyx945 "His Dark Materials" was anti-religion. Lewis was pro-religion.

  • @magecodi100
    @magecodi100 4 роки тому +1361

    Rule of thumb
    Soft Magic: described by poets
    Hard Magic: described by lawyers

    • @ookazi1000
      @ookazi1000 4 роки тому +86

      And Lawyer Poets: What type of system's do lawyer poets make?

    • @rethomore
      @rethomore 4 роки тому +84

      @@ookazi1000 An absurdly obscure one, because they're tired of thinking and want to have fun with their brain

    • @JonSnow-yr1hn
      @JonSnow-yr1hn 4 роки тому +10

      @Carey Hunt fk u man, I spat tea all over my laptop.

    • @primeemperor9196
      @primeemperor9196 4 роки тому +51

      Soft magic is a metaphor.
      Hard magic is a tool.

    • @WoFDarkNewton
      @WoFDarkNewton 4 роки тому +6

      @@ookazi1000 septic systems, or at least the contents therein.

  • @sortilien2099
    @sortilien2099 4 роки тому +834

    There is rules we understand like gravity :
    Normal people : Of course !
    Physicist : Do we ?

    • @Real_MisterSir
      @Real_MisterSir 4 роки тому +169

      Normal people: Of course we understand space, time, speed, gravity, etc.
      Physicists: Well yes, but actually no.

    • @Astraeus..
      @Astraeus.. 4 роки тому +55

      Well mostly. I mean we understand what it does, how it will affect things, etc... How it's created and how it propagates are basically big old blanks though.

    • @The_Keeper
      @The_Keeper 4 роки тому +75

      We *do* understand the rules.
      We *don't* understand the mechanics.

    • @thomaschongs3456
      @thomaschongs3456 4 роки тому +13

      @Conrad Kujur that's the Dinning-Kruger effect for you.

    • @ledocteur7701
      @ledocteur7701 4 роки тому +9

      We understand what phisics and how it's interact but we don't understand why and what make it a thing.

  • @R3GARnator
    @R3GARnator 4 роки тому +520

    "Don't be too proud of this technological terror you've constructed. The
    ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the
    Force." --Darth Vader, Star Wars.

  • @treborely
    @treborely 4 роки тому +1852

    I feel the need to put down something as "made for children" incredibly insulting to both interests and to children. Children are so much smarter then they get credit for. Plus an adult can enjoy stories aimed at kids as long as that story is still well made. Wall-E is undoubtedly a movie aimed for children; but that doesn't mean any adult should feel ashamed for liking it

    • @ronalddavies1091
      @ronalddavies1091 4 роки тому +48

      I feel exactly the same way. 👍✌️

    • @grayscribe1342
      @grayscribe1342 4 роки тому +182

      I actually find this also very insulting to the parents which put up the money to buy the books for their children. If this was for me, I can expect a certain quality in this book, but because it's for my child, I suddenly can't expect the same quality? For the same amount of money the writers can be lazy?

    • @JustGrowingUp84
      @JustGrowingUp84 4 роки тому +87

      @@grayscribe1342 Exactly!
      Just because something is targeted at children is no excuse for it to be trash!

    • @lordferum9921
      @lordferum9921 4 роки тому +14

      If you refer to the FTC/COPPA case, they have a "mixed audience" passage in the law:
      -eg. 'FTC 16 CFR Section 312.2 - Definitions'. it's hard to find, but after a longer read after (10)(vii) it's the section. It refer to paragraph (1), and has sub-section (i) and (ii):
      www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/16/312.2
      -or 'FTC FAQ G. GENERAL AUDIENCE, TEEN, AND MIXED-AUDIENCE SITES OR SERVICES':
      www.ftc.gov/tips-advice/business-center/guidance/complying-coppa-frequently-asked-questions#General%20Audience
      It's YT/Google, which spread false information here, they don't want to update their system.
      Edit: E-mail Addresses

    • @janickchristiansen7108
      @janickchristiansen7108 4 роки тому +8

      @@lordferum9921 who are you writing to?

  • @CowCommando
    @CowCommando 4 роки тому +747

    To over-generalize my understanding, I would explain the magic spectrum thusly:
    Soft Magic: magic as a whole can do anything until a rule says it can't.
    Hard Magic: magic as a whole can't do anything unless a rule says it can.
    Any magic system can fall anywhere on the scale between these two extremes, and even different parts of the same magic system can vary on how hard or soft they are.
    How'd I do, teacher?

    • @eathenalbrecht5072
      @eathenalbrecht5072 4 роки тому +45

      You stole the words right off my keyboard!

    • @victormillen8393
      @victormillen8393 4 роки тому +75

      To me, the concepts of hard magic works like enhanced physics, while soft magic is the enhancing of the mind. And the two does not conflict each other.

    • @dmschoice2571
      @dmschoice2571 4 роки тому +39

      THAT is a great definition for me. While watching the video I kept wondering where the magic of D&D/Pathfinder would fall, because considering it's huge plethora of spells, caster classes and custom magic rules, I started to wonder if it was a *soft* magic system, since conceivably magic could do *anything* in a D&D/Pathfinder setting.
      But with this summary it becomes a bit more clear: yes, conceivably it could do anything, but only *if* a rule says it can.
      So, i *is* a hard system (and now I'm wondering if a soft system in a Pen&Paper RPG is at all possible. *Mage: The Ascension* might be the closest candidate I can think of...)

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому +2

      I really like that Tim Homer. No seriously well put and very succinct.

    • @sitnamkrad
      @sitnamkrad 4 роки тому +26

      ​@@dmschoice2571 Magic in D&D is a soft magic system. There are 2 flaws in your idea of "Magic can't do anything unless a rule says it can" when it comes to D&D.
      First : When talking about rules for magic systems, in this context we're talking about narrative/world rules, not game rules. For example there are no clear narrative reasons given for why some spells require verbal/somatic/material components and others don't. But there are clear game rules (defined by what your GM will allow)
      Second : Both in game rules as well as narrative/world rules, it is possible to add rules or "break" previously set ones with the addition of spells or class features.
      Example that applies to both of these.
      Let's take the spell "Silent image". A level 1 spell that requires a verbal, somatic and material component. It also requires a spellslot to cast. All of these are game rules and not explained by narrative. But even if they were, it shows a problem because there is such a thing as the warlock invocation "Misty Visions". Which allows to you cast the same spell at will (without expending a spell slot), and without the material component. And there is no explanation given. And you can homebrew new spells and invications to make and break all these rules whenever you want.
      Or to put it simply : Magic as a whole can do anything until a GM says you can't.

  • @93Avenger93
    @93Avenger93 4 роки тому +896

    Oh, there’s an even more disingenuous argument than the “made for children” one, the “bruh, it’s fictional, why do you care how it works”.
    I miss it when consistency and cohesive rules were the norms for fictional universes. Suspension of disbelief doesn’t mean “there are no rules, it’s fiction and magic, who cares”.

    • @thesteaksaignant
      @thesteaksaignant 4 роки тому +50

      "when consistency and cohesive rules were the norms for fictional universes" hmm when was that exactly? ^^

    • @JayJay753
      @JayJay753 4 роки тому +123

      That applies to anything
      "BRO ITS JUST A GAME/MOVIE/SHOW IT"S NOT MEANT TO BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY" is one of the most annoying "arguments" ever devised by humankind

    • @rikospostmodernlife
      @rikospostmodernlife 4 роки тому +14

      I think yesterday, bc 10, 20, 30 or 40 years ago that was mostly only valid for the hard sci-fi 'genre', it's just nowadays that people are crazy for BranSan's laws

    • @93Avenger93
      @93Avenger93 4 роки тому +39

      Steak Saignant roughly before post-modernism took over in force in artistic and critical circles, death of the author became the normative thinking pattern and themes and meta-textual interpretations of the work became more valid and important than the work itself. Literary (and to a wider extent artistic) history has phases, and the modern infatuation with not having consistent rules is just that: modern.
      This doesn’t mean the past doesn’t have inconsistent works, bad writers are eternal. The difference is that if you go back two maybe three decades and shown somebody the script for TLJ, nobody would defend it because “muh themes are so deep” and nobody would praise Ruin for his work directing that catastrophe. That’s what I’m talking about.

    • @DarthBiomech
      @DarthBiomech 4 роки тому +31

      >I miss it when consistency and cohesive rules were the norms for fictional universes.
      Crafting complex fictional systems is actually a relatively new thing (And I suspect that the popularity of DnD helped with making it more common). Few authors bothered with maintaining consistency.

  • @Autenaten_McCready
    @Autenaten_McCready 3 роки тому +122

    Here's a thought. The stronger the spell in soft magic, the more rules apply to the magic being used. The more "resources" that are used to create powerful spells, the more rules apply to allow those "resources" to coexist together. This would effectively limit soft magic systems. The more powerful the magic becomes, the more the magic morphs into a hard magic system.

    • @kylejohnson423
      @kylejohnson423 2 роки тому +10

      The time turner from Harry Potter is a perfect example of this. The time turner is a "spell" that can literally turn back time, but it requires a special charm (the turner itself), it requires precise calculations to go back in time, and they fully establish you need special approval from the government to even own one.

    • @frocat5163
      @frocat5163 2 роки тому +12

      I think most soft magic systems also limit magic by tying many things to the caster's "strength" in whatever fuels the magic. For example:
      In Harry Potter, not every witch or wizard can cast a patronus, apparate, or kill with avada kedavra.
      In the Wheel of Time, not everyone who can channel can weave / spin gateways or balefire, nor can they all create identical effects with the same weaves.

    • @Gaius453
      @Gaius453 Рік тому +6

      That's basically Hunter x Hunter's Nen.

  • @HelloFutureMe
    @HelloFutureMe 4 роки тому +692

    Join us, Shad. The dark side has cookies with unknown and unpredictable properties.

    • @sh4dy832
      @sh4dy832 4 роки тому +46

      That sounds an awful lot like you're trying to sell drugs...

    • @ethangarland5737
      @ethangarland5737 4 роки тому +9

      I’ll take the grade a shit

    • @silver-sajninerawsaknoluna2361
      @silver-sajninerawsaknoluna2361 4 роки тому +14

      Hello Future Me hi I’m a big fan; can you please do some videos including more science in some series like eragon or keeper of the lost cities? (Obviously you don’t have to, I and probably some others would appreciate it)

    • @thugles104
      @thugles104 4 роки тому +7

      OMG seeing Tim commenting on Shadiversity is like seeing one of these amazing crossovers where your favorite characters meet each other, and all you can do is stare like "WOW" :)

    • @fyviemartin8008
      @fyviemartin8008 4 роки тому +4

      woah it’s hello future me! hi i’m a subscriber

  • @TheLostArchangel666
    @TheLostArchangel666 4 роки тому +267

    I mean as for Gandalf; His nature as one of the Istari, and his task being to guide, rather than to step in and try to solo Sauron in an epic 1v1, does explain why he so rarely uses the full scope of his power.

    • @owenkilcup6504
      @owenkilcup6504 4 роки тому +14

      The thing is that sauron and gandalf are both maiar so technically they have similar power but sauron used his for evil but gandalf used his for good

    • @Mnnvint
      @Mnnvint 4 роки тому +22

      Pretty clear he's just talking about the LoTR films here; as I recall, in the books Gandalf does very little overtly supernatural (he lights a few fires, etc). Most of the magical powers in the books are just alluded to.

    • @mk__cyanheron1154
      @mk__cyanheron1154 4 роки тому +19

      Gandalf has one of the three rings of power given to elves (elrond has water, galadriel has light, gandalf received fire from cirdian). Using the rings of power too excesively (even by the elfs or maiar) can corrupt souls (that is why Gandalf is too afraid to touch the One Ring). This is not a plot hole as far as Middle Earth is concerned, but I agree it wasn't explicitly stated in the movies or books.

    • @MySerpentine
      @MySerpentine 4 роки тому +14

      The last time people tried direct magic against a dark lord a continent sank, so there were good reason to not do that again.

    • @TheLostArchangel666
      @TheLostArchangel666 4 роки тому +2

      @@MySerpentine True although if I'm not mistaken, Eru-Illuvatar had a fair bit to do with the downfall of Numinor and all that too.

  • @candiceschippers2026
    @candiceschippers2026 4 роки тому +521

    I agree Shad, blaming soft magic systems for what are just plot holes missed in structural edits isn’t really fair.

    • @draconisthewyvern3664
      @draconisthewyvern3664 4 роки тому +3

      Yes it is when the soft magic is used as deus ex machina and to explain away events in the story.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar 4 роки тому +3

      @@draconisthewyvern3664 which is more or less what the OC wrote...

    • @draconisthewyvern3664
      @draconisthewyvern3664 4 роки тому

      @@SonsOfLorgar maybe i am misunderstanding something than because he says it isn't fair

    • @GuitarsRockForever
      @GuitarsRockForever 4 роки тому +2

      I disagree. The way "soft magic" system is used, put it in "what ever the plot needs".

    • @willmosse3684
      @willmosse3684 4 роки тому +14

      Draconis The Wyvern - the OC is saying that the problem is not soft magic itself, but when soft magic “is used as deus ex machina and to explain away events”. You can write soft magic without using it as deus ex machina, and you can write deus ex machina without soft magic (or without any magic at all). “Oh, look, someone left this chainsaw here just as I need to get through this door.” No magic, plenty of deus ex machina. It is a question of good vs. bad writing.

  • @callmequaz9052
    @callmequaz9052 3 роки тому +56

    Obviously the reason why Gandalf wasn't always casting the same magic was because he was trying to conserve his spell slots. Having to long rest constantly to get your slots back is a pain.

    • @johanrosenberg6342
      @johanrosenberg6342 3 роки тому +3

      Seeing this video really made me wonder how big of an impact LotR had on magic in D&D.
      While they're not the same (based on some other comments I've read here), they both achieve a system where magic is severly limited.
      Take this in contrast to games like Skyrim where magic is plentyfull.

  • @TheRealmDrifter
    @TheRealmDrifter 4 роки тому +157

    "Maybe the _true_ magic was the friends we made along the way..."
    "Go away, Sarah."

  • @ice4cow
    @ice4cow 4 роки тому +81

    Big part of soft magic is the fact that you as a reader don't know how it works, yet it has defined rules in the universe. To mention Lord of the Rings, several times it is explained that what Hobbits perceive as magic is regular stuff for Elves or Gandalf.
    What I'm trying to say is that there might be hard rules for magic system in the fictional universe, but if the character that you follow doesn't understand them, they don't need to be explained to you either.

    • @CsZsolt
      @CsZsolt 2 місяці тому

      Exactly. Third person limited, as Shad explained. The Hobbit and LoTR was written from the point of view of the Hobbits. Silmarillion though was written in omniscient, needing to explain stuff that Hobbits did not understand.

  • @DarkSoulSama
    @DarkSoulSama 4 роки тому +193

    "Obviously" Gandalf can only cast 1 max level spell per rest, and he doesn't rest that often.
    :P

    • @pixelmaster98
      @pixelmaster98 4 роки тому +20

      nah, he's playing an older edition of D&D, and he has only prepared one use of each spell (and doesn't rest often)

    • @abadenoughdude300
      @abadenoughdude300 4 роки тому +14

      Or he uses scrolls and has only one scroll per spell. :b

    • @mme.veronica735
      @mme.veronica735 4 роки тому +12

      I think Tolkein also used the varient rest rules where a long rest is a whole week instead of a day.

    • @pixelmaster98
      @pixelmaster98 4 роки тому +4

      @@abadenoughdude300 haven't seen Gandalf wielding sheets of paper while fighting the Balrog, but maybe I missed that :D
      Or maybe Gandalf is actually just someone's familiar who is casting spells through him ^^

    • @Notmyname1593
      @Notmyname1593 4 роки тому

      @@pixelmaster98Who says spells have to be written on paper scrolls.

  • @kylejohnson423
    @kylejohnson423 2 роки тому +45

    I think one thing we should establish, that wasn't explicitly stated is, having a character solve a problem using their magical talents is not the same as a Deus Ex Machina. Let's use the example of Luke Skywalker trapped in a cage. He knows the force can move objects, he knows that a tumbler in the padlock must be shifted slightly to unlock the cage, so he take a minute to focus on that tumbler and he is able to accomplish this task.

  • @Cavouku
    @Cavouku 4 роки тому +288

    "In the real world there are properties about the real world that we understand just through observation - like gravity."
    *Physicists, nervously sweating*: Oh, yeah, no, we totally understand gravity. Ha. Nothing uncertain about gravity whatsoever.

    • @CorwinTheOneAndOnly
      @CorwinTheOneAndOnly 4 роки тому +34

      We understand it in the sense that it is completely consistent on almost any size scale. Things attract things. More things increase attraction proportional to the amount of "more things" there is, due specifically to each individual thing in the "more things" attracting a thing on their own.
      *That* doesn't change on almost any sized scale and is therefor a hard rule. It's such a hard rule that gravity even attracts light/radiation, one of the smaller particles in the universe.

    • @higueraft571
      @higueraft571 4 роки тому +6

      Well, it's less gravity, and more Quantum mechanics for *sure,* and space/time. For example everything is normal, but if you reverse time and the x y to -x -y, then everything should be normal in reverse. But it isnt. Certain forces and particles behave differently than they should

    • @Zero0mtk
      @Zero0mtk 4 роки тому +26

      I read a science/philosophical article about gravity way back, and I think it explained the issue of "understanding gravity" really well.
      Basically, we understand gravity as "a phenomenon" just through observation, nothing uncertain about you falling down if you jump off a building. But when it comes to gravity as "a theory" (i.e. causal explanation of how gravity actually works), it's what you described: they'll nervously sweat. lol I think Shad refers to gravity more as a phenomenon rather than theory in this video.

    • @johnathanera5863
      @johnathanera5863 4 роки тому +7

      @Honudes Gai yes. We know that gravity exists and what it does. We dont know why or how. Aka, we dont understand it. The OP is right

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf 4 роки тому

      @@johnathanera5863 No, we do know for the most of it why and how it works - we are already far past that point for nearly a century now. It just is trickling down to the masses so slowly it is like still riding around the city by horse.

  • @SangoProductions213
    @SangoProductions213 4 роки тому +139

    (Good) Hard magic: A tool
    (Good) Soft magic: A metaphor
    Also Magic: "Things go pretty sparkly boom! Characters win. Yay"

    • @gasterblaster9817
      @gasterblaster9817 4 роки тому +32

      (Bad) Hard magic: bad soft magic
      (Bad) Soft magic: Deus ex Machina/ Mary Sue enabler

    • @williamross6477
      @williamross6477 4 роки тому +3

      This is probably the best and most concise definition I have seen 👍

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones 4 роки тому +2

      Only a Sith would see the Force as a tool...

    • @markuhler2664
      @markuhler2664 4 роки тому +2

      From Hello Future Me?

    • @mielipuolisiili7240
      @mielipuolisiili7240 4 роки тому

      In my mind I read the things go pretty etc. -thing with voice of Terrible Writing Advice.

  • @florkiler6242
    @florkiler6242 4 роки тому +232

    "it shouldn't be able to do that, that's not how magic works"
    -Shad 2019

    • @MaxHimbigger
      @MaxHimbigger 4 роки тому +24

      That's not how the force works

    • @DJWeapon8
      @DJWeapon8 4 роки тому +17

      That's how mafia works.

    • @animeproblem1070
      @animeproblem1070 4 роки тому +4

      FlorKiler new hello word Devil

    • @-kenik9629
      @-kenik9629 4 роки тому +1

      @@DJWeapon8 Everyone pays bridge toll, even in space.

  • @danburns4265
    @danburns4265 4 роки тому +308

    Okay. So. Inconsistency in the LOTR movies I'll give you, there isn't an explanation. It's an assumption that people will accept it and move on. Books though: it is strongly established by Tolkien that there are different classifications of divine beings, Gandalf being among an order of them, bound to human form so as to be limited in their ability to counter Sauron in their full might (being themselves the same species as Sauron and the Balrog). Gandalfs order is restricted by how they are allowed (by the higher order, the valar, and by their one creator, eru) to use their "magic". Gandalf can use his full might on the Balrog as it is essentially the same as him, although heavily corrupted. He cant use it on the Witch king because the witch king is Human. HIS power is granted by Sauron, who is unrestricted in his ability to use and share his power through the rings of power. Granted, there is still so much left unsaid by Tolkien even in the depths of the lore about what exactly these angelic spirits, known as the Maiar and Valar, are capable of, but coming from the influences of christianity, Celtic, Norse and Greco-Roman mythology that he was inspired by, these characters are completely above the capability of our protagonists (Bilbo and Frodo) to comprehend the power of in the Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit. It is only in the Silmarillion, whether protagonists are mainly elves who have grown up around these angelic spirits that we learn even the slightest bit of information about their true nature, but, as lower species, the elves still do not truly comprehend them, so we the reader do not get to understand fully. Unfinished tales, and the appendices give some more information, but there are still unexplainable inconsistencies in Tolkien's world that I will agree with you on. I'd be happy to talk about this more for the sake of clarity, as you can probably tell I'm just as interested in this subject as you. Once again, a great video, and interesting clarification of the divide between Soft and Hard magic systems.

    • @boltactionartist9475
      @boltactionartist9475 4 роки тому +17

      Also if you have read some of the unfinished tales Gandalf was and to other wizards (I cant spell their name) were given the form of humans so they cannot become a tyrant similar to saroun

    • @JH-zs3bs
      @JH-zs3bs 3 роки тому +25

      Also from the books, I always understood that the whole concept of magic is a force than cannot be mastered by the wizard and using it is both dangerous and very exhausting. Furthermore Power in thr LOTR universe is always portrayd as a responsibility and a burden, since Power corrupts. Gandalf as well as Galadriel who are the two most powerful characters except for Sauron himself (and likely Tom Bombadil) both do not dare touching the ring, because the ring will use their power to allure and corrupt them with more power.
      I believe that for the same reasons Gandalf does not or maybe cannot use his magic at will. Since it is not his magic but a power that he can use, but also knows that it is better to use it as rarely as possible.
      Furthermore Magic is often also connected to Will power and will power can be exhausted. Thus I assume that Gandalf was already to exhausted and battle worn when he met the Witch king to use his magic.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 роки тому +8

      @@JH-zs3bs I wouldn't really call Tom Bombadil powerful in the way that Sauron was powerful. More that he was disconnected, immune, to the other powers in the world, that they couldn't be affected by them.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 роки тому +6

      @@boltactionartist9475 "Gandalf was and to other wizards (I cant spell their name)"
      Sauroman, Radagast, and the two blue ones that as far as I know was never named.

    • @boltactionartist9475
      @boltactionartist9475 3 роки тому +3

      @@ano_nym the blue were named though I don’t remember them but I know there in the unfinished tales book, where you can also see how sauroman came to snake the hobbits pipe weed. It’s actually one of my favorite stories as he has a whole argument with Gandolf about it

  • @tommeakin1732
    @tommeakin1732 4 роки тому +314

    "When Gandalf was fighting the Lich King..."
    World of Warcraft - Lord of Rings cross-over confirmed

    • @WolfyAteUrSocks
      @WolfyAteUrSocks 4 роки тому +7

      Guild Wars also had a lich king
      Actually he's the final boss on the original

    • @commander31able60
      @commander31able60 4 роки тому +28

      World of Warcraft - Rise of the Witch-King

    • @boogsloogus
      @boogsloogus 4 роки тому +4

      For Lordaeron I say

    • @brunopereira6789
      @brunopereira6789 4 роки тому +5

      @Internet Deathclaw he's totally a Lich. Voldemort too.

    • @otwk
      @otwk 4 роки тому +2

      @@brunopereira6789 How is he a lich? He's not undead in any way, shape, or form.

  • @johannesnauser8616
    @johannesnauser8616 4 роки тому +176

    "And they're a lot of fun" - shows picture of Voldemort casting Avada Kedavra

    • @rainerbloedsinn182
      @rainerbloedsinn182 4 роки тому +24

      To be fair: That one is a killer spell on every party. ;)

    • @matt00041
      @matt00041 4 роки тому +15

      Maybe killing people is fun. I've never tried, so I don't know, but...
      Wait, how does Shad know?

    • @muche6321
      @muche6321 4 роки тому +9

      Maybe Voldemort thought killing people would make them like him. But it didn't. It just made them dead.

    • @Notmyname1593
      @Notmyname1593 4 роки тому +4

      @@muche6321 But at least they were no longer angry at him.

    • @Quirderph
      @Quirderph 4 роки тому +1

      @Joe Alexander Depends on where the shot hits. Gunshots can be survivable, an Avada Kedavra spell is not, (assuming the victim is unprotected.)

  • @Parbruek
    @Parbruek 4 роки тому +129

    I like how Tolkien, though using a soft magic system, is clear on the relative power of various practitioners. I.E. Gandalf clearly can't face Saruman initially. Sauron would have reason to fear Aragorn if he had taken the ring, but not Frodo. Even if you don't get what's going on, you have some fair answers to what if questions.

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 3 роки тому +24

      Lord of the Rings has a soft magic system, because it is told from the perspective of regular people; small regular people with big feet, but regular people nontheless. "Magic" is just a label they put on things they don't understand. There are a few sections where it is told from Gandalf's point of view, but he is speaking to Frodo and chooses words he knows Frodo can understand. His story was probably worded differently when he told it to Elrond.
      Was Gandalf the point of view character, it would be a hard magic system.

    • @rikusauske
      @rikusauske 3 роки тому +15

      @@schwarzerritter5724 imagine gandalf talking to elrond "yeah thought it was a classic light displacement but then there were these side effects"

    • @theoneandonly3435
      @theoneandonly3435 2 роки тому +4

      @@schwarzerritter5724 thats one of the smartest comments on lord of the rings ive ever heard, not onlz on zt but overall

    • @kyltredragmire4939
      @kyltredragmire4939 2 роки тому +3

      @@schwarzerritter5724 That is a wonderful way of describing Tolkien's magic. I believe this can also be seen when Sam asks to see some "elf magic" and the elves are just confused by what he means. I honestly think Shad doesn't think The Lord of the Rings is a good story :(

  • @dougthedonkey1805
    @dougthedonkey1805 4 роки тому +86

    I love how Shad says “in my opinion” all the time so that he doesn’t piss people off

    • @mannysantos1562
      @mannysantos1562 4 роки тому +19

      To be honest it's a very important thing that many youtubers forget to do

    • @Anonymous-hx3pu
      @Anonymous-hx3pu 3 роки тому +8

      @@mannysantos1562 it's sad that anyone should have to worry about pissing other people off on youtube.

    • @mannysantos1562
      @mannysantos1562 3 роки тому +1

      @@Anonymous-hx3pu True.

    • @dougthedonkey1805
      @dougthedonkey1805 3 роки тому +1

      @@emwk3qdmmfm not necessarily. Often people mistake opinion for factual claim and vice versa.

    • @mannysantos1562
      @mannysantos1562 3 роки тому

      @@emwk3qdmmfm I agree

  • @thaynedye1292
    @thaynedye1292 4 роки тому +157

    Magic in LOTR isn’t contradictory so much as ephemeral. All of the POV characters can’t do magic and thus its limitations are confusing and unclear to them. This is not the same thing as the magic system being contradictory, it’s merely the manifestation of ignorance on the part of the observer.

    • @tiagodarkpeasant
      @tiagodarkpeasant 4 роки тому +11

      if gandalf used magic with more concistency they could simply walk into mordor

    • @LOTRFAN33
      @LOTRFAN33 4 роки тому +75

      @@tiagodarkpeasant
      Gandalf is forbidden to use his powers directly like that unless in extreme circumstances like the Balrog. His job was mainly to guide Middle Earth inhabitants to fight themselves. True that the movies don't explain this.

    • @sh4dy832
      @sh4dy832 4 роки тому +30

      Tiagorpg mendes one does not simply walk into Mordor

    • @Real_MisterSir
      @Real_MisterSir 4 роки тому +37

      @@LOTRFAN33 It still kinda does explain it though. After killing the Balrog, it's explained how he traveled through space and time, and it was decided by the higher powers that his task was not yet done, so he was sent back to fulfill his purpose on Middle-Earth. Granted it doesn't say with direct words "Gandalf is a demigod sent to Earth to establish balance", but it's a case of show-don't-tell, where his general actions should indicate that he is not there to win the battles people have, but rather guide them towards doing it themselves. He doesn't intervene directly in any outcome, he just carves a path that people can chose to follow or not.
      I think with the Witch King battle in Minas Tirith, the extended version has a lot more visual exposition in regard to the magic powers used. If I remember correctly, the Witch King actually destroys Gandalf's staff, proving that Gandalf is not allowed to use magic powerful enough to single-handedly overcome that of Sauron.

    • @Ninjaananas
      @Ninjaananas 4 роки тому +2

      Magic in LOTR is often indeed Deus ex Machina. But there are also normal beings like elves which use magic or even the Witchking.

  • @duchi882
    @duchi882 4 роки тому +293

    *Interesting take about Magic System!*
    its a nice comparison to _"Hello Future Me's"_ take on the same topic

    • @Sawtooth44
      @Sawtooth44 4 роки тому +18

      his stuff pretty good

    • @sirewokthefirstidonthaveal2902
      @sirewokthefirstidonthaveal2902 4 роки тому +13

      i like hello futere me the guy makes some great stuff

    • @ginge641
      @ginge641 4 роки тому +9

      @@sirewokthefirstidonthaveal2902 Shad has collaborated with him before.

    • @sirewokthefirstidonthaveal2902
      @sirewokthefirstidonthaveal2902 4 роки тому +2

      @@ginge641 i think i remember that yeah

    • @tpotshax8703
      @tpotshax8703 4 роки тому +3

      That video of his in particular was an oddly defensive one. It seemed clear to me he had a bit of a chip on his shoulder about hard magic systems as talked about by people who listened to Sanderson. I feel he should have just talked about Sanderson's ideas directly rather than the unfocused reach around the video ended up being. I normally like his stuff.

  • @Kr-nv5fo
    @Kr-nv5fo 4 роки тому +98

    "Of course you should fight fire with fire. You should fight _everything_ with fire."
    -Jaya Ballard, task mage

    • @luc-zq7ku
      @luc-zq7ku 4 роки тому +4

      the salamander (wh40k pyromaniach space marine) aprouved

    • @undermanned983
      @undermanned983 4 роки тому +6

      Person within fireball distance

    • @The_SmorgMan
      @The_SmorgMan 4 роки тому +1

      K r problems are less problematic when you melt them at the atomic level

    • @The_Friendly_Fire
      @The_Friendly_Fire 4 роки тому

      Yes! Fight with me!

    • @bkane573
      @bkane573 4 роки тому

      As a mortarman, I've started a number of fires with my fire missions.
      I've also put a number of fires out, with more rounds....

  • @michaelnewswanger2409
    @michaelnewswanger2409 3 роки тому +110

    The magic in Lord of the Rings is more established in the Silmariliion particularly in respect to the wizard's power. They were given rules they had to follow before they were sent to the earth. We don't know what all the rules are but Gandalf isn't allowed to do everything he is capable of doing.

    • @GreatGreebo
      @GreatGreebo 2 роки тому +2

      Yep! 💯

    • @BernddasBrotB7
      @BernddasBrotB7 2 роки тому +13

      Shad's ignorance of LotR lore is a painful thing to behold at times, which is a shame since he references it so much.

    • @TRivan-kx2bi
      @TRivan-kx2bi Рік тому +5

      Tolkien never really defined magic in Middle-earth. Gandalf is basically an angel, his power is a part of him. Galadriel tell's Frodo and Sam that the power of the Rings is magic, but the power of the elves isn't. Some of the Ringwraiths are described as being "sorcerers", but we're never told exactly what they're capable of doing.

    • @BernddasBrotB7
      @BernddasBrotB7 Рік тому

      @@TRivan-kx2bi Rattling bones and pronouncing hollow curses, most likely. At least in terms of effectiveness for the last group. Maybe combined with a touch of genuine foresight if you're being generous.

    • @slightlysaltysam7411
      @slightlysaltysam7411 Рік тому +1

      Sounds like a catch-all excuse to lazily explain away plot holes in LoTR, specifically concerning why Gandalf didn't use magic more often.

  • @fast-yi9js
    @fast-yi9js 4 роки тому +431

    Sooo I read you book, it wasnt only great from the perspective of a hardmagic enthusiast like me, but im also impressed how extremly well written the ending was , since new authors often struggle with getting that right in a way were you dont loose interest before nor feel unsasisfied at the last page

    • @myowndata
      @myowndata 4 роки тому +3

      so, recomend it?

    • @christophermacon7524
      @christophermacon7524 4 роки тому +3

      Unsatisfied not unsasisfied. Just saying.

    • @christophermacon7524
      @christophermacon7524 4 роки тому +7

      IDK what you are talking about But you sold me on the book.

    • @IIARROWS
      @IIARROWS 4 роки тому +8

      The magic is pretty well explained, instead.
      You explore what it can do along the character, and even in the end, with the wonderful duel, it didn't break anything, it's just something none ever thought before.
      You have no rules defined from above, instead you get to explore them as you go.

    • @Zach0451
      @Zach0451 4 роки тому +5

      I also read the book and think that my 8 year old cousin could write a better book.

  • @INSAne_DrUNkard
    @INSAne_DrUNkard 4 роки тому +140

    "It's magic! I ain't explainin' sh*t." -someone (some time ago)

    • @JeveGreen
      @JeveGreen 4 роки тому +1

      ua-cam.com/video/URJ_qSXruW0/v-deo.html

    • @INSAne_DrUNkard
      @INSAne_DrUNkard 4 роки тому

      @@JeveGreen I think the meme is older than that vid but nice nonetheless

    • @MaaZeus
      @MaaZeus 4 роки тому +5

      This is soft magic in a nutshell. "He does things because... Magic!" where as hard magic system goes "he cannot do that because thats not how this magic works".

  • @atraxian5881
    @atraxian5881 4 роки тому +74

    "Fantasy is awesome" - Shad 2019
    All the truth in three simple words.

  • @greyrifterrellik5837
    @greyrifterrellik5837 3 роки тому +60

    I also like to think there's a 3rd, middle category. For thematic matching, I'll call it a "firm" magic system.
    Systems where there's clear, defined restrictions on what an individual power or ability can do, but the range of different powers is essentially limitless.

    • @legonenen
      @legonenen 2 роки тому +4

      That sounds like a lot of Anime / Manga stories (specifically the Shonen action genre)

    • @greyrifterrellik5837
      @greyrifterrellik5837 2 роки тому +2

      @@legonenen yeah, definitely common there, but not the only place I've seen it

    • @J4R0D
      @J4R0D Рік тому

      That's the type my custom magic system is, with different dimensions being able to be manipulated either individually or together, but the user is taxed greatly for overuse. But one who can channel all the dimensions they want is nigh unstoppable

  • @Thunderbolt-Racing
    @Thunderbolt-Racing 4 роки тому +124

    This video popped up on my notifications right as I was writing a document detailing how the material properties of a magic staff affect what it can do...either fate is a thing or google is watching me >.>

    • @jadedoak8868
      @jadedoak8868 4 роки тому +1

      Interesting! I'd like to read said document, if you're willing to share it once you're finished.

    • @Thunderbolt-Racing
      @Thunderbolt-Racing 4 роки тому +2

      @@jadedoak8868 Sure! It's not done yet, but I'm planning on putting a post up on reddit.com/r/magicbuilding when it is

    • @tistedmentality3715
      @tistedmentality3715 4 роки тому +6

      Dude Google does watch you.

    • @hq4287
      @hq4287 4 роки тому

      Or both... 😮

    • @krithikvirdikar1601
      @krithikvirdikar1601 4 роки тому +6

      It's 2019, it's definitely Google watching you.

  • @galetine5253
    @galetine5253 4 роки тому +69

    The most dangerous magic wielders are the ones that rarely let anyone know what they’re capable of.

  • @Argonova
    @Argonova 4 роки тому +104

    In defense of Lord of the Rings... the books do explain that the Ishtari (wizards) and elves, use magic very sparingly in the Third Age. Firstly because it makes them brilliantly visible to Sauron and his servants, and second, because there is a danger of becoming corrupted the way that Saruman did. Characters who use magic more frequently become bound to the world and lose their spiritual qualities. It was the will of the Valar that their emissaries fight the shadow of Mordor with wisdom rather than matching power for power, because of how catastrophic the wars against Morgoth were during the First Age. Gandalf is arguably a bit more liberal with his use of magic during The Hobbit, but he was unaware of the rising threat. In the book, at least.

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому +14

      LOTR needs no defending as this is not an attack on it. (He specifically is refencing the movies when he discusses plot holes). The key thing is it is a soft system and that is fine it is not a bad thing. The Silmarillion and appendices do add a lot more information but its still a great system and it is still a soft one. We do not know what the Ishtari could do or exactly where their limits are, (Both absolute and self-imposed). Yet that is not important because as you say the point is it is for mortals to sace themselves and the role of those with magic is to support them and allow them to mature and succeed so that those with magic such as the elves and the ring bearers can move on and leave this earth to men.
      Soft does not mean bad or no rules or no explanations. What it implies is we (as readers) are unsure what it can and cannot do. Tolkien I feel understood this very well and that is why Helms Deep is not resolved with Ishtari or elven magic, the rings destruction is not resolved with said magic either. It's why the witch king is killed by Eowyn not Gandalf etc. it is a soft system but one that is fully satisfying whilst remaining mysterious to the reader and its true abilties are uncertain.

    • @willmosse3684
      @willmosse3684 4 роки тому +16

      Trisjack20 - well, you say LOTR needs no defending, but Shad never actually says he is criticising the movies. He always says “LOTR does this, LOTR does that”. You can tell he is referring to the movies because he references things that are movie only and leaves out information from the books. In fact, I don’t think he’s read the books. But then he should say that. Because it’s irritating when a professional fantasy commentator starts referencing possibly the best - and certainly the most influential - epic in modern fantasy and starts saying it’s full of plot holes and errors in ways that are not justified.

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому +7

      @@willmosse3684 That's a valid comment. I believe I have seen a video where he mentions he has read them but he certainly would not be someone who has re-read them or describe himself as a big fan etc and if you are going to reference something heavily he could deflect this by openly saying the movies. I agree with you that it is clear because of what he says and the clips he shows and that he does reference Gandalf doing something in 'the Hobbit movies' using those words. He also does reference when he faces the witch King that if he (Gandalf) had done something he had done earlier in the movies (And that makes sense as the scene only happens in the movies). Yet a single line at the start saying clearly 'I am talking about the movies not the books' would defintely have helped avoid this problem you outline.
      His definition of a plot hole when referencing LOTR still exisit in LOTR the books ie something is used early on but then not used in later sections without the reader understanding why not. So Gandalf is able to throw down the Balrog and smite his ruin on the mountainside and he does use magic to disarm Aragorn Legolas and Gimli and yet never does that to any of the other powerful enemies (For which there are doubtless reasons such as limiting his magic use and influence on the world) without it being explained. It isn't just the magic there are various things we see used and then not (The infamous 'why didn't they fly with the giant Eagles' etc).
      I don't think these are massive plot holes as this is a mythos and was meant to be written this was leaving a lot to mystery and almost everything magical is portrayed to almost be normal. Calling the Wraiths Black riders and the river rising against them is never overtly magical and that's how Tolkien wanted it. Almost like a pseudo history mythology rathre than a novel. I love that the mystical aspects of the books are permanently underplayed and to me that makes these unexplained differences of approach a stylistic choice that goes along with the themes and 'reality' of the series and does not throw me out. When I was reading LOTR I never found myself thinking Why doesn't Gandalf just let loose with all his powers? Because Gandalf had been subtly underplaubing his part from day 1 it was in character for him to show only glimpses of what he could do. I didn't realise until years later what the Ishtari were or that Gandalf held the third ring of the Elves. Nor was I looking for that information to enjoy the story.
      Anyway thank you for your reply, it helped me understand the need for your first comment and made me think a little more deeply for myself on a great series of books.

    • @Jimmmmmmmm94
      @Jimmmmmmmm94 4 роки тому +4

      Also, I believe the Istari aren't allowed to use their magic against lesser opponents, they're sent there to give advice and aid to the peoples, not to win the war single handedly. So the only times you see Gandalf using it, is against the balrog (fellow Maiar), Saruman (fellow Maiar), and the Nazgûl. So, no plot hole.

    • @sulphuric_glue4468
      @sulphuric_glue4468 4 роки тому +4

      Gandalf can theoretically use his magic as much as he likes, but through self-imposed restriction (and the restriction of Eru Ilúvatar) he can only use his magic against certain opponents and in certain ways. For self defence, Gandalf can use any means to fight the Balrog, but he cannot use his powers willy-nilly to achieve what he sees as the ideal solution. Gandalf only uses his magic to protect himself or to protect his friends.

  • @Valsorayu
    @Valsorayu 4 роки тому +82

    Soft Magic: *Y'AI 'NG'NGAH, YOG-SOTHOTH H'EE-L'GEB F'AI THRODOG UAAAH*
    Hard Magic: *I cast eldritch blast*

  • @shadfacts6465
    @shadfacts6465 4 роки тому +145

    Shad Fact: Shad likes to play a form of real life fruit ninja but replace the fruit with "The Skulls of his recently decapitated foes"

    • @Ninjamanhammer
      @Ninjamanhammer 4 роки тому +6

      I didn't know Shad had does.

    • @jesusstaccato8448
      @jesusstaccato8448 4 роки тому +9

      A doe? A deer? A female deer?

    • @MaxHimbigger
      @MaxHimbigger 4 роки тому

      The skulls of his recently decapitated foes ninja

    • @DeathBringer769
      @DeathBringer769 4 роки тому +1

      So he first decapitates them... then he further slices up their bare skulls? God damn that's a brutal "fruit ninja" lol :D

    • @Ninjamanhammer
      @Ninjamanhammer 4 роки тому

      @Max Himbigger
      I know, I was making fun of the spelling error.

  • @professionalmemeenthusiast2117
    @professionalmemeenthusiast2117 4 роки тому +54

    In Brandon Sanderson's lecture on magic systems, which I would highly recommend, he points out that the 'softness'/'hardness' of the magic is determined by how much the *reader* knows, giving the example that Gandalf does have clearly defined limits and abilities in-universe, as the Silmarillion explains what the wizards are in greater detail, but within the story of Lord of the Rings we just aren't told that much.

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому +9

      Even in the Silmarillion where we do understand the role of the Ishtari and that the Valar exist etc we still do not know what the magic of the Valar or the Maiar can or cannot actually do. though we know magic is leaving the world and that using it 'draws the eye'. It is definitely a soft mythological system and it is an epically great one!

    • @Cachalyce
      @Cachalyce 4 роки тому +3

      As far as I see it, Sanderson got it only from a readers perspective. However, I'm a worldbuilder and I always struggled with that concept because for a long time, I tought as the author I'm also not allowed to fully understand my soft magic system. And thats dangerous, as it clearly makes using magic as deus ex machina easier.
      There are so so many people that use the rules for the reader-perception for worldbuilding, that soft magic systems are incredible frowned upon in like 80-90% of worldbuilding communities. They tell you to build a hard magic system and only make it appear soft in the writing.
      This definition here however is clearly aimed at wordlbuilders, and I see it kinda as a defence of soft magic systems (like I said, most communities go the "the harder the better" approach) in a way authors could practically create them.

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому

      @@Cachalyce Good thinking and worth considering. I think it is useful to understand far more as the author than you necessarily reveal and I am absolutely certain that when there is some feeling of consistency that is crucial. I really liked your comment and has helped me think. I see myself as much more of a world builder than I am an author.

  • @Harshhaze
    @Harshhaze 4 роки тому +260

    *Everyone on December 1st:*
    "My magic system is hard"

    • @Avarn388
      @Avarn388 4 роки тому +21

      Harshhaze No magic November ;)

    • @ZikedY
      @ZikedY 4 роки тому +3

      Neil Major Magic March

    • @ripLunarBirdCLH
      @ripLunarBirdCLH 4 роки тому +2

      Actually there's more than one magic system in my stories and some of them are soft, some are hard.
      Magic itself in my stories is a hard system. There are clear rules.
      Aura, PSI and Deformation however are soft magic systems (even though it's not Magic actually).
      However you can essentially learn to use Magic and very few ppl cannot wield it at all. But you must be born with affinity to Aura and PSI to wield it. While one is not born The Deformed, there are very nasty consequences to becoming one and it's not actually easy to begin with.

    • @christophermacon7524
      @christophermacon7524 4 роки тому +8

      I hate when I wanna bust a spell but it's cold and my magic is soft

    • @christophermacon7524
      @christophermacon7524 4 роки тому +2

      But it's cold in December so there's no point in busting a spell😢

  • @WinterPhoenixForestKirin
    @WinterPhoenixForestKirin 3 роки тому +57

    As I recall, in the LOTR books, Gandalf was asked to melt the snow on a mountain, and he was unable to do so. He explained that magic actually just tapped into the hidden nature of things, so he didn't have the ability to just do what he wanted with anything. The point is, at least in the books, it's not really a matter of "plot holes", as you assert. It is a question of the intrinsic nature of the thing/place. This is very much off he top of my head, but the point is it was accounted for (although, you might be referencing the movies, which I didn't watch). I actually prefer this system, since there's much more a sense of mystery to it than a magic system where everything is accounted for.

    • @justthinkingoutloud2538
      @justthinkingoutloud2538 3 роки тому +5

      Thanks for pointing that out, Tolkien does give some explanation for Gandalf's magic in that system! I completely forgot about that!

    • @jacobtrowbridge7947
      @jacobtrowbridge7947 3 роки тому +1

      Ok but even though he said that it doesn't really clear anything up it's just I can't do that because I can't.

    • @v.sinfinite9854
      @v.sinfinite9854 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah but, again, The force too is basically an entity of its own.

  • @eiskalteshandchen9036
    @eiskalteshandchen9036 4 роки тому +116

    Just one adding: Much is explained in the Sillmarillion

    • @frys87
      @frys87 4 роки тому +15

      Actually got triggered

    • @frys87
      @frys87 4 роки тому +30

      But he does say that he is talking specifically about the movies so he covered his ass

    • @sheevpalpatine80
      @sheevpalpatine80 4 роки тому +23

      He is talking about the movies. Gandalf doesn't even engage the Witch King in the book.

    • @frys87
      @frys87 4 роки тому +22

      @@sheevpalpatine80 Yeah I know but in the books the magic does have limitations that are explained. Basically before the world was created people had an infinite amount of magic as long as they were willing to spend the time required to create something they were able to create anything. Then the more time they spent in the world the weaker their magic grew. In the trilogy the last magic is removed from middle earth.

    • @soulextracter
      @soulextracter 4 роки тому +15

      @@frys87 I think the criticism can be directed mostly at the script writers in Hollywood, since when you adapt something, you are supposed to put in all the necessary information for your adaptation to make sense, otherwise it's nothing more than a plot hole. You should never be required to read the book to understand the movie if you catch my drift. I am of the opinion that the book is almost always better than the movie, but that's no excuse to make a bad movie. Just because it's not as good as the book, it should be a good movie non the less, and then it needs to make sense in and of itself!

  • @Jaster_Mereel
    @Jaster_Mereel 4 роки тому +177

    For the LoTR references it's important to remember that the movies go miles away from the source material.

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому +56

      Agreed and he makes clear he is specifically speaking of the films here. Still LOTR is definitely a soft magic system and a very good example of one done right. Even with the Silmarillion etc where the explanations are much deeper we still do not know what the Maiar or Valar magic can or what it cannot do. Guess that is why Tolkien resolved his major plot points without it.
      It is a beautiful background setting and theme but the story is carried out by mortals who are the heroes proving they are worthy to inherit the earth magic is about to leave behind.

    • @BNuts
      @BNuts 4 роки тому +34

      Tolkien didn't want his plots to be resolved by his demigod-level characters, but by his everyman-level characters. Gandalf _could_ have snapped his way to victory as though he had the Infinity Gauntlet, but normal people had to win because if he won then left, the world couldn't protect itself.

    • @jordanjames2956
      @jordanjames2956 4 роки тому +7

      @@BNuts That is why I personally like soft magic much more then hard magic. I find it very difficult to relate to hard magic systems, or in soft magical settings in which the characters are powerfulin magic. It is honestly one of the problems I have with Brandon Sanderson's writing. Using the example of the wheel of time series I feel like the magic system was very much a soft magical system in the first several books, which I love, but progress to be more hard magic towards the end of the series. Also the characters get much more powerful towards the end. This put me off so much that I never read the last book and never will.

    • @BNuts
      @BNuts 4 роки тому +1

      @@jordanjames2956 Characters are supposed to get stronger as the story progresses.

    • @jordanjames2956
      @jordanjames2956 4 роки тому +4

      @@BNuts I understand that but I do find it harder to relate when they get to powerful. For instance I feel that Rand al Thor from the wheel of time gets less interesting as he gets more powerful throughout the series. This can be done well sometimes, as with Aang in Avatar, but I feel that more often then not it is done in a way that strips the humanity from the story. This is my opinion and I am fine that people have different ones. Hell I hate 99.9% of anime, and by hate I mean hate, and there are plenty of weebos out there.

  • @MidwestArtMan
    @MidwestArtMan 4 роки тому +255

    Hard magic: enchanted sword
    Soft magic: enchanted teddy bear

    • @Trisjack20
      @Trisjack20 4 роки тому +8

      Still laughing

    • @jordanjames2956
      @jordanjames2956 4 роки тому +8

      Soft magic and hard magic serve very different roles. In the Lord of the Rings for instance magic is used as a plot device to push the story forward and in many instances a hard magic system would get the way of the story. Of course part of that is my own personal preference because I dislike the heavy use of magic by characters in stories. I find that it makes the characters less relatable and the world more unbelievable.

    • @Mr.fed_agent
      @Mr.fed_agent 4 роки тому +2

      What are the enchantments?

    • @thompsonator4696
      @thompsonator4696 4 роки тому +3

      @@Mr.fed_agent vsauce music starts playing..

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 4 роки тому +2

      @@jordanjames2956 And you can pull anything you want off your sleeves because.. "magic"

  • @bencowles2105
    @bencowles2105 3 роки тому +33

    Gandalf's magic is almost divine in nature. He seems to be able to do more impressive things when directly confronting evil. That said a true wizard would also live by a strict rule. Just because you can do something does not mean you should. Gandolf's greatest power was inspiring others to resist evil and he used that all the time. Love the video. I write fantasy fiction and have had to deal with the principles of magic a lot. My books are not publicly available though I only share them with close friends and family because I really hate the modern publishing system.

    • @hmwr0h
      @hmwr0h Рік тому +2

      Haven't you ever thought about gaining recognition and some money with your books? I mean, in order to become a professional writer? I write fantasy too, but honestly, I don't want only some friends and family (well, I can count less than 5 people out of it) to read it, especially because they're not my target audience. My Fantastic Literature mentor managed to release his book to a real audience through Facebook ADS. He sells all over the country (Brazil) and is now starting his own publishing company (with books written by his pupils).

  • @Modest_PhD
    @Modest_PhD 4 роки тому +91

    I think part of your argument can be summarized into: in soft-magic systems, you can make your own rules, but once you make them, you can't break them.

    • @shadiversity
      @shadiversity  4 роки тому +36

      or at least you shouldn't for the sake of good writing and consistency.

    • @toprak3479
      @toprak3479 4 роки тому +3

      But you have to not only break your established rules but also keep in mind when introducing new elements that the story so far is still logical. That is if you want to write something that can be taken seriously by anyone over 10.

    • @Secret_Moon
      @Secret_Moon 4 роки тому +2

      @@shadiversity I think the distinction between hard and soft magic is that hard magic is categorized.
      A soft magic system pretty much lets everything float; nothing is grouped or linked with others therefore there is no restriction when a new magic is introduced. On the other hand, in a hard magic system, everything is divided into groups, each one has certain attributes associated with it (one magic can still belong to multiple groups, e.g.: fire magic/use mana/channel through silver, etc.). So with a hard magic system, you can still make up new magic that has never been introduced before, but then you are obligated to categorize that new one into one of the groups already established, essentially putting limits and restrictions on it; OR, you can establish a new group with new attributes for this new magic (e.g. use life force instead of mana, so you can use it even when running out of mana), but then you'll have to define that new group and also find a way to justify the establishment of it (the danger of using life force, making it a rare thing). If you fail to do both, it would no longer be a hard magic system.

    • @palladin9479
      @palladin9479 4 роки тому +8

      @@shadiversity But ... that is true for every magic system ever created. Every magic system had someone somewhere either write down rules or have an imagination of how it worked. Honestly there is no definition between the two because every time I've ever seen anyone attempt to explain it, it ultimately came down to how ignorant the reader was. All magic systems are limitless until the creator sets a limit, either before hand as a part of world building or in the middle of a scene with discovery. The only differences seem to be how much the author informs the reader of the system and how consistent he author is with that explanation.

    • @dionjaywoollaston1349
      @dionjaywoollaston1349 4 роки тому +3

      Shadiversity so by your explanation would healing magic be categorised as soft magic while lighting bolt and fireball are hard magic( considering the latter two can be scientifically explainable because the human body does produce heat and a certain level of bio electricity so it’s reasonable to assume that mages have trained to produce a higher than normal amount) come to think of it this also means that the warp from warhammer 40k is classed as hard magic

  • @biohazard724
    @biohazard724 4 роки тому +136

    I love the idea that Mutants are extremely specialized sorcerers.
    Wolverine: I cast slice at 3rd level

    • @lordsith3322
      @lordsith3322 4 роки тому +7

      There was this RPG : Anima, where magicians played next to psyons, martial artists or whatever. Magic/sf was all the same mechanic, but with different showy side. Mutants, superheroes were the same as magicians/wizards, but with more specialization on one or two powers (and their implicit requisites. Such has "you can regenerate as wolverine. You also can recreate body parts and live with your head intact. etc.)

    • @lillyanneserrelio2187
      @lillyanneserrelio2187 4 роки тому +12

      Sounds like Wolverine is a Paladin - uses edged weapons and has strong self healing spells. Did I mention his class' passive sense evil ability? Yep, activates it with his sharp hearing and his nose's sense of smell- by sniffing his enemies, smelling the gun oil scent of approaching gunmen, etc.

    • @biohazard724
      @biohazard724 4 роки тому +2

      @@lillyanneserrelio2187 sounds more like an innate Hunter's Mark imo

    • @lillyanneserrelio2187
      @lillyanneserrelio2187 4 роки тому

      @@biohazard724 hunter's mark. that sounds like an ability from the hunter class in World of Warcraft. A game I used to love before it all the talent trees, 40 man raids, and overall gameplay got dumbed down with the last expansions.

    • @biohazard724
      @biohazard724 4 роки тому +5

      @@lillyanneserrelio2187 It comes from D&D, you mark a person or object and you're able to track it for a very long distance

  • @SepticFuddy
    @SepticFuddy 4 роки тому +7

    What I learned from this video: I have a general distaste for magic systems, and part of what I appreciate about LOTR is that it doesn't waste time and effort on trying to establish one while distracting from the strengths of the writing. I think in Tolkien's case it mostly stems from creating a world of myths and legends that are as eroded by time and poorly understood as those of our own world. He very intentionally left so many things mysterious and unexplained, e.g. the ent-wives.

  • @maclypse
    @maclypse 4 роки тому +325

    Hard magic: Star Wars
    Soft magic: Disney Star Wars
    Sadface.

  • @Randerggan
    @Randerggan 4 роки тому +21

    In the in world lore of Lord of the Rings, Tolkien states that his books are translations of the the writings contained in the Red Book of the Westmarch, a.k.a the book that bilbo writes his story, There and Back Again, that is later given to Frodo to write about his journey. The inconsistences present in the magic used in these stories can be attributed to the hobbits' lack of understanding of it, because they're completely oblivious to the workings of Middle-Earth. You could also say that the process of "translation" could have affected it too, but that's too much of a stretch for my taste :P

    • @Randerggan
      @Randerggan 4 роки тому

      @@Kingofthehill674 Well, to be fair, the silmarillion wasn't meant to be published. Christopher Tolkien took the journals and annotations that his father made while creating Middle-earth and published, without even correcting some mistakes made by JRR (the famous case of Glorfindel dying in the Silmarillion, and then appearing in LOTR). But, with that being said, Tolkien could have flashed out the magic a lot more, but the point of his stories was much more for them to be read like a myth. At least I think so.

  • @subwayfootlong788
    @subwayfootlong788 4 роки тому +326

    Soft magic systems are defined by what the magic CAN do.
    Hard magic systems are defined by what the magic CAN'T do.

    • @Avarn388
      @Avarn388 4 роки тому +5

      Tacosmin the Trickster Yup.

    • @1stmorgoth289
      @1stmorgoth289 4 роки тому +3

      question: where would you but the harry potter magic then?

    • @danielantony1882
      @danielantony1882 4 роки тому +8

      Doesn't make much sense to me. Magic isn't supposed to have stupid limitations that Handicap itself. Magic is supposed to be based on Imagination and the only limits to it are the rules of existence.

    • @subwayfootlong788
      @subwayfootlong788 4 роки тому +26

      @@1stmorgoth289 I remember very little of Harry Potter, but from what I remember, there was never a defined "This is what magic cannot do." The only limitation of the magic system was you needed a wand to cast magic or else it's just not possible. Otherwise from what I remember you could do just about anything, which would classify it as a soft magic system.

    • @stefanchriss7679
      @stefanchriss7679 4 роки тому +28

      @@subwayfootlong788 they had limitations, there were some rules. I remember some like, you can't bring someone back to life, you can't produce food out of nothing

  • @sergiograndio577
    @sergiograndio577 4 роки тому +270

    Real world physics, the hardest magic system ever
    Change my mind

    • @sh4dy832
      @sh4dy832 4 роки тому +17

      Sergio Studios will do. As soon as you managed to explain to me how gravity (actually) works...

    •  4 роки тому +10

      Tell that to Araki... Hard magic system: it just works... waaaait a minute.

    • @sergiograndio577
      @sergiograndio577 4 роки тому +2

      @ i know how emperor crimson works bud

    • @donotcare57656
      @donotcare57656 4 роки тому +22

      Nah, Quantum physics has too much RNG

    • @lucianograff6512
      @lucianograff6512 4 роки тому +1

      Lmao they can't figure out gravity

  • @Vodhr
    @Vodhr 4 роки тому +127

    Listening to this in the background, and you hear:
    "When Gandalf was fighting the Lich King..."
    Boy would I not be suprised if there is a fan-fiction crossover where that happens! :P

    • @truefalcon6884
      @truefalcon6884 4 роки тому +8

      Same that was a huge
      excuse me lmao wtf

    • @mkillian
      @mkillian 4 роки тому

      To be fair. He does drive off a nazgul when the riders from osgiliath(sp) are riding to the walls of gondor. ... though I dont think thats what he is talking about.

    • @huskers4rootbeer
      @huskers4rootbeer 3 роки тому

      Why a crossover when it happens in a legit movie? Although a lich king would be terribly hard to root out of a fortification.

    • @huskers4rootbeer
      @huskers4rootbeer 3 роки тому

      @I am tired of humanity he's literally fought both, gandalf is just a badass like that.

    • @huskers4rootbeer
      @huskers4rootbeer 3 роки тому

      @I am tired of humanity a lich king is basically a pumped up necromancer.....which you do get to see in LOTR. You really ought to be more polite... it'd get you much farther in life.

  • @nickcampbell5626
    @nickcampbell5626 4 роки тому +55

    Great example of a hard magic system: Eragon
    Great example of great ideas put in an unsatisfying story: Eragon

    • @joeblazer3429
      @joeblazer3429 4 роки тому +6

      Eragon is one of my favourite book series of all time

    • @LeganArabach
      @LeganArabach 4 роки тому

      @@joeblazer3429 I loved the series until the last book (which I waited for with such excitement, constantly checking his website for updates)

    • @drksideofthewal
      @drksideofthewal 4 роки тому +4

      I quite liked Eragon, it's been a while since I've read it though. Excellent magic system.

    • @FellowHuman137
      @FellowHuman137 4 роки тому +3

      Mistborn man...you meant mistborn.

    • @cameronforster8574
      @cameronforster8574 4 роки тому +3

      I dont think that it is a hard magic system. For one all the limitations come from the user not the magic itself, and as the story evolves eragon makes new spells and finds different ways to use them.
      So the main limiting factor is if there is enough energy so if there is energy the spell can happen.

  • @shawnshultz8601
    @shawnshultz8601 4 роки тому +109

    One note on LoTR magic, especially that of Gandalf: The rules, at least, are defined. He is limited to the powers of the mortal world while in Middle Earth. This is somewhat difficult to define, however, if the books are read closely, one thing that is clear is that "magic" is largely either a scientific device of some sort or situational in a similar way that natural effects only occur under certain situations. Thus Gandalf's magic is either technological, ie. fireworks, Glamdring, the elf ring he has and, one could argue, even his acorn "bombs", or are completely situational consequences brought on by the limited use of his Maiar nature in the natural world as dictated by the rule stated above. So when he fights another Maia such as the Balrog, yes he can make a shield or whatever, but when fighting the Witch King who is not a Maia he cannot though there are certainly other, lesser, powers he could employ because they line up naturally, though perhaps less effectively, with the situation.

    • @potatoskunk5981
      @potatoskunk5981 4 роки тому +25

      Also, the shield he makes against the Balrog isn't in the book.

    • @shawnshultz8601
      @shawnshultz8601 4 роки тому +15

      @@potatoskunk5981 True, but Shad seems to be going off the movies here.

    • @potatoskunk5981
      @potatoskunk5981 4 роки тому +6

      @@shawnshultz8601 Yeah, but the books are better.

    • @sonamadinolf6096
      @sonamadinolf6096 4 роки тому +7

      @@shawnshultz8601 That always irks me when people refer to the movies when the books are right there. Especially since he's comparing it to other books!

    • @pilotkaboom2974
      @pilotkaboom2974 4 роки тому +3

      @Obi-Wan Kenobi exactly. People need to read the works in full before criticized the plot holes.

  • @vincentthendean7713
    @vincentthendean7713 4 роки тому +70

    I'd like to see more magic being used for industrial revolutions in books. After all, hard magic is pretty much science in their world. Kind of like Avatar (but more than just lightning bending generators). Can't wait to see more applications of sunstones in Chronicles of Everfall 2.

    • @noukan42
      @noukan42 4 роки тому

      Never hard of the Tippyverse?

    • @boguslav9502
      @boguslav9502 4 роки тому +2

      I mean think about it. Magic in our world in history was the reqlm of a small caste that jelously guarded the secret to it. They go through a lot to wrote it down study it, get into the nitty gritty of it. If this power had actual very obvious effects why wouldnt there be stidents idnetifuing the laws of this force eaely on. Especially due to how powerful it is.

    • @nicks.2612
      @nicks.2612 4 роки тому +3

      The thing is our technological advancement comes from the need to get things done effectively and the understanding of physics and stuff to find a way to achieve it. We have planes because we wanted faster travel than boats across oceans. But for Wizards there is no necessary need like that to evolve and if there is then a newly created spell or potion does the trick. In hard system like I would count Avatar the many restrictions lessen the fantastic Al nature of the world and for e.g. light Ning bending does not become an entire way of living but is more seen as a resource to excel technology as it does not have many other practical uses like a full or soft magic system like Harry Potter.
      So technically like in Star Wars were there is no real advancement in technology we must just assume that in these magic world's all of the major breakthroughs already happened and they are living on the peak their society can achieve with their magic.

    • @noukan42
      @noukan42 4 роки тому +2

      @@nicks.2612 there may be advancement on magic tho. Create food and water mostly remove the need of farming but can still be upgraded in "create food and water that actually tastes good" for example.

    • @nicks.2612
      @nicks.2612 4 роки тому

      @@noukan42 that depends on the magic. In Harry Potter for example it is stated that food can't be created out of thin air.
      I also didn't mean that there is no possibility for growth but rather that we could assume that if it ain't a major plot threat that certain improvements were either done or can't be done at all until the source material addresses it officially

  • @codymccormick7317
    @codymccormick7317 4 роки тому +15

    I think my favorite hard magic system would have to be alchemy from Fullmetal alchemist. The rules and limitations/cost are a huge point of the whole series and it was handled so well. Actually animes in general usually come up with some pretty awesome and unique magic systems both in the hard and soft camps.

    • @LightDragon777
      @LightDragon777 Рік тому +1

      *Slight Spoilers*
      One of my favorite examples in FMAB of Brandon Sanderson's rule (that magic as a solution is only satisfying if the audience knows the rules) is in Ed's fight with Greed. Where at first he can't break through Greed's armour, Ed reasons out that it must be made from carbon, which can be molecularly altered (via alchemy) to have the hardness of graphite rather than diamond. It was a good example of how a character can use their "magic" to resolve an issue in a cool way that shows their cleverness rather than just being Dues ex machina.

  • @hawkshot867
    @hawkshot867 4 роки тому +55

    Shad flexing his Mistborn limited edition copy T.T

  • @kerenberelson7618
    @kerenberelson7618 4 роки тому +239

    Hard magic: rules are clearly told to us
    Soft magic: rules are not told to us, we need to infer them

    • @danielsantillanes6945
      @danielsantillanes6945 3 роки тому

      me seeing 69 likes in this coment ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

    • @PrinceIsot
      @PrinceIsot 3 роки тому +2

      Thank you I was kinda confused

    • @legonenen
      @legonenen 2 роки тому +1

      The soft magic system can also be inferred by the writer. (Without them truly having tons of rules behind the scenes)

  • @DeathwishGamer
    @DeathwishGamer 4 роки тому +50

    Love that he has Alita Battle Angel on his shelf.

    • @Arcexey
      @Arcexey 4 роки тому

      Deathwish Gaming relevant to soft magic and plot holes - alita battle angel does high flippy robot jumps and twirls and can dodge and run fast and duck and weave and be super agile like a super fast anime character that denies physics- then all of a sudden loses this power at the end of the movie and can't rescue someone 1 foot from her.

    • @DeathwishGamer
      @DeathwishGamer 4 роки тому +4

      @@Arcexey Actually, sci-fi's also deal with these same aspects. What is defined by the writer as technologically possible sets the audience expectations what can and cannot happen. So in many ways, it is relevant.
      I won't get into your antithesis with the anime. If all main characters should never fail in your eyes, then it is your right to feel that way, though I don't think that makes for good writing in the long run. Characters should be flawed.
      But as a sci-fi, 'denies physics' would be quite the opposite in what the boundaries of the setting would describe. If she is super fast, it is likely because she is a cyborg. If she can do flips, and duck and weave, it's because she was trained in a martial arts. None of which denies physics on its face.

    • @Diveyl
      @Diveyl 4 роки тому

      I prefer Battle Angel Alita myself. 😋

  • @AphoticGoblin
    @AphoticGoblin 3 роки тому +23

    “inhaling toxic fumes from metal gives you magical powers”
    can confirm, wife and son got the magical power of having cancer

  • @BenVara
    @BenVara 4 роки тому +68

    The lack of understanding Gandalf's magic in the Hobbit and Lord of the Rings is not a plot-hole, it's good writing. Gandalf is a deliberately inscrutable character--he keeps his secrets--and it would be detrimental to the cosmology of the stories, which are focused on the hobbits, to stop and explain how an Istari worked in every beat of the story. We do see, in the books, that Gandalf's magic is often based on trickery borne of wisdom as much as magic. He sets acorns on fire and throws them like small firebolts, he performs ventriloquism and voice-throwing to keep the trolls fighting til sunrise, he knows primal languages that gives him rapport with animals.
    All of these examples lend themselves to the conclusion that when Gandalf does something flashy he is either consuming a resource--be it his own essence or a prepared charm or a divine pact of sorts--or it is in fact made to look more impressive than it really is by his own artifice. Or you're referring to cheesy things directors throw into the movies to pad out the VFX budget, which certainly can be plot-holes.

    • @nathanc939
      @nathanc939 4 роки тому +29

      You also forget it is actually mentionned in the book that he is there to guide and should not intervene in a way humans or elf couldn't, unless in very specific circumstances. Gandalf is actually much more powerfull than what we see in both the movies and LotR books. What a maiar like Gandalf can do is mostly explained in the Silmarillion. Some of the maiars are insanelly powerfull, but even the valars see their power degrade when used in ways Eru would not aprove and that is why Sauron made the One Ring, it was his way to avoid slowly loosing power like Melkor did.

    • @willmosse3684
      @willmosse3684 4 роки тому +14

      Absolutely correct. Shad always wants to understand the mechanics of everything, but that is his own personal quirk. When the mechanics are not revealed, that does not mean there is a plot hole.

    • @jerithil
      @jerithil 4 роки тому +18

      It's mentioned in the books that you would not encounter a more powerful being in middle earth unless you were brought face to face with Sauron. Against the Balrog is pretty much the only time he is allowed to really let loose as its a remnant of a previous age and no longer belongs in middle earth.

    • @willmosse3684
      @willmosse3684 4 роки тому +3

      jerithil - Good point

    • @3353080
      @3353080 4 роки тому +4

      Yes, but keep in mind that Soft and Hard are based on how much the characters knows about magic. Hobbits and humans know close to nothing, which is why they call it magic, nor do they know what Gandalf is. But the elves know how the world works, so they don't even call it magic. Where the reader is with the characters is what we will classify as Soft or Hard Magic.

  • @admiral_waffles533
    @admiral_waffles533 4 роки тому +50

    i refuse to believe i got here before shad facts without recommendations

    • @dorianrobinette9712
      @dorianrobinette9712 4 роки тому +4

      shad facts is awesome whoever they are.

    • @stormveil
      @stormveil 4 роки тому

      @@dorianrobinette9712 Shad Facts is really annoying, actually. Boot-licking spammer.

    • @alexandermartinez1318
      @alexandermartinez1318 4 роки тому

      Shadfacts isnt a thing. It was just that one time

    • @dorianrobinette9712
      @dorianrobinette9712 4 роки тому +1

      Stormveil ok troll.

    • @admiral_waffles533
      @admiral_waffles533 4 роки тому

      @@alexandermartinez1318 no, he's on all the shad videos I've seen so far

  • @trexrising4097
    @trexrising4097 4 роки тому +168

    Star Wars Sequel fans:
    "You shouldn't take Star Wars seriously, it's made for kids."
    Star Wars franchise:
    -Shows multiple scenes of people bleeding to death, getting chopped in half, impaled, and LITERAL genocide against entire planets, cultures, and civilizations.
    Me: -_-

    • @umiluoja8894
      @umiluoja8894 4 роки тому +22

      As a child i watched Holocaust documentaries
      And im definitely not mentally unstable now.

    • @jacobstaten2366
      @jacobstaten2366 4 роки тому +2

      It is made for kids (or rsther the whole family) and the bits with people bleeding etc are simply a part of that.
      I don't mind the new movies. Somebody said it best that all 9 movies are tied for 4th place. They're fun. They have universal themes and lessons. But some people get so angry over the new movies existing beyond justification as of something they own was damaged or destroyed. I like all of the movies, but none are perfect.

    • @Shin_FTW
      @Shin_FTW 4 роки тому +21

      @@jacobstaten2366 Oof. This take. I mean, the problems with the films have been discussed to death by this point. Even IHE recently came out saying they're indefensible, despite enjoying The Last Jedi (as a standalone "guilty pleasure" since it goes against the series it's a part of). Not that you can't enjoy them. That's a different topic altogether. IHE also made a good point against it being "for children". It explores some pretty deep stuff that goes right over kids' heads.
      We've also learned from many lawyers' giving their insight on COPPA that "for kids" and "family friendly" are *not* the same thing. They've even pointed out that the FTC also recognizes that they're not remotely the same, so to say that Star Wars is made for kids just because kids can also enjoy it is a point of false association.
      I mean, we can all agree that there's a fundamental difference between Dora the Explorer's plot/storytelling and the original Teen Titans'. One is kid-safe, while the other is actually made _for_ kids. People using the "it's for kids" argument are trying to give it the level of protection of those very simple shows directed at children, when they're more in line with the more serious narratively-driven stories that are simply ok for children to also watch. Star Wars wasn't made for kids. It's just that they _can_ see them.

    • @Shin_FTW
      @Shin_FTW 4 роки тому +13

      @@jacobstaten2366 However, I've actually just looked this up and have learned that, even then, children can only see Star Wars movies with permission. All of the Star Wars films have at least a PG rating, which means "Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.". Things that are specifically "for kids" do not need this.
      Even more interesting is that Revenge of the Sith and *the entire Disney trilogy* is rated PG-13, which means "Parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be *inappropriate for children under 13."* A "kid"/"child" is defined as "under 13". By rating, the Disney trilogy is literally not made for kids.

    • @jacobstaten2366
      @jacobstaten2366 4 роки тому

      @@Shin_FTW I wouldn't call it indefensible any more than the other movies. It's not nearly as bad as people wish it was. They simply didn't get what they wanted out of it and if one person did, the rest would still complain. It's like trying to make a "perfect" Superman movie when everyone now has a different idea on what that means. Each film in the entire series has major glaring flaws and they all pretty much even out. Empire Strikes Back maybe wins by a nose.
      The rating system is extremely flawed. There's a great documentary that's only slightly outdated (public pressure has since used a crowbar to pry the regulations slightly looser) called "This Film Is Not Yet Rated." Rocky used to be rated R and now it would probably be rated G. Don't trust the ratings board. A child can see limbs getting cut off, but not smoking or swearing. They can see decapitation and high body counts (especially if the target is not regarded as human or there's no blood), but not a healthy nude body even outside of sexual context.

  • @_gold_eye_2656
    @_gold_eye_2656 4 роки тому +124

    Hard magic: Science!
    Soft Magic: Unexplained science with loopholes!

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 роки тому +34

      Hard magic: Physics!
      Soft magic: Quantum physics!

    • @GabrielusPrime
      @GabrielusPrime 3 роки тому +1

      @Gavin Allison This is the comment I agree with the most I've seen so far: My opinion is that magic needs rules to explain, at least partially, how it works, or it isn't MAGIC, but a MIRACLE. It may be my Christian upbringing, but I like to draw a line between characters that are human/mortal and ones that are gods/divine beings, which I find harder to do when mortal characters can do anything the settings god's can and it's handwaved by saying "they have magic".

    • @valhatan3907
      @valhatan3907 3 роки тому +6

      Fuck rules. Never seen Hayao Miyazaki works? Or LOTR?

    • @PlanetESPYREX
      @PlanetESPYREX 2 роки тому +3

      Nah, soft magic is esoteric, is beyond science

    • @_gold_eye_2656
      @_gold_eye_2656 2 роки тому

      @@valhatan3907 lotr has rules to its magic depending on strength granted by God like separating the Maiar and Valar into a hierarchy in that way it’s made clearly that their powers are limited a limitation defines a rule in narrative.

  • @darronvanaria2952
    @darronvanaria2952 4 роки тому +117

    A better title for this video would be, “Why We Laughed When Leia Flew Through Space”

    • @Kobaford
      @Kobaford 4 роки тому +8

      Because it just looks funny?

    • @PeterG00000
      @PeterG00000 4 роки тому +9

      I like that scene, however it does seem a bit out of left field because they spent zero time setting up her powers in anything other than Return of the Jedi, and even there not really. She also needed a scene or two later on to give some context as to why she never flexed those obviously useful force tricks when it might have saved a galaxy she spent her whole life defending in more mundane ways.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 роки тому +2

      @@PeterG00000 why?

    • @shigerufan1
      @shigerufan1 3 роки тому

      It's just a force pull on the ship though, there's nothing outlandish about the force power itself, rather it's the situation that the movie decided to put Leia in to show she can use it.

    • @shigerufan1
      @shigerufan1 3 роки тому

      @@PeterG00000 there were books taking place after Episode 6 that establish her eventually being trained in the force, those books were also where the movies got Kylo Ren from.

  • @michaelantosch9888
    @michaelantosch9888 4 роки тому +20

    One thing I like about "The Wheel of Time"'s magic system is that the limitations to how the Power is/can be used primarily arise from a lack of knowledge, lack of experimentation, or gradual forgetting over time. Many of the weaves that are discovered later on are ones that aren't "supposed" to be possible, or have been long forgotten because of the culturally-imposed restrictions on how the Power is used.
    I'm not a huge stickler for the "hard" vs. "soft" distinction, but what I think the series does very well is show that the Power is essentially "bigger" than the people who are attempting to systematize it. However much you might have learned, there's always more to it than you're aware of.

  • @dancingdroid
    @dancingdroid 4 роки тому +6

    About the whole Gandalf and using magic thing:
    The wizards were sent to Middle Earth not to fight Sauron but to help the inhabitants to do it themselves. That's why we see Gandalf use certain magic in certain situations because it doesn't go against his mission. It's also the fact that the magic of wizards in LotR isn't about throwing spells (Saruman throwing a fireball is the movies only) but they have other magical properties like Sarumans voice.
    There is also the whole magic bubble thing you mentioned that was actually done with the Ring of Fire that he got from Cirdan the Shipwright. Because it's the Ring of Fire it worked to defend against the Balrog and not the Witch King.

    • @fakjbf3129
      @fakjbf3129 4 роки тому

      Well Gandalf does turn pinecones into hand grenades in Fellowship of the Ring, which is kinda like a fireball spell.

    • @dancingdroid
      @dancingdroid 4 роки тому

      @@fakjbf3129 No he lights them on fire, not the same.

  • @mangomariel
    @mangomariel 4 роки тому +4

    I kinda like that Gandalf's magic just happens and you are amazed, It is mysterious.

  • @wanderer2657
    @wanderer2657 4 роки тому +21

    Only Shad would flex about having a limited edition hard cover book on us.

  • @rebbyra
    @rebbyra 4 роки тому +100

    Thanks to a certain director, I can now pull anything out of my ass. And if you have a problem with that, all I have to do is yell:
    HOLDO MANEUVER !

    • @haillobster7154
      @haillobster7154 4 роки тому +4

      Hold da dooooorrr!!! 😫

    • @nicks.2612
      @nicks.2612 4 роки тому +19

      Ah the Holdo maneuver the ancient trick if telling fans they are just angry manbabies and invalidate any criticism even if constructive. Yes, very effective strategy

    • @aralornwolf3140
      @aralornwolf3140 4 роки тому +2

      @@nicks.2612 ,
      So constructive... the next movie lost money.

    • @amisfitpuivk
      @amisfitpuivk 4 роки тому

      I hear a huge bell tolling... Brb, gotta find my SS uniform and burn everyone that isn’t my nemesis even though my helpless nemesis is standing right over there.

  • @DinnerForkTongue
    @DinnerForkTongue 4 роки тому +74

    I like me some good hard crunchy magic. Having rules to establish a solid sense of plausibility and doesn't give cheap authors the opportunity to do asspulls. It's more fun to play with limitations anyway.

    • @joelsasmad
      @joelsasmad 4 роки тому +15

      Soft magic works better for a setting where magic is supposed to be mysterious.

    • @toprak3479
      @toprak3479 4 роки тому +3

      I agree. Cheap deus ex machina endings, plot-convenient power ups and all internally inconsistent magic suck ass. I hate how everytime in Harry Potter every new magical element that was introduced rendered the entire series into a big plothole ridden piece of shit.

    • @DinnerForkTongue
      @DinnerForkTongue 4 роки тому +5

      @@toprak3479
      Although I'd blame Rowling's mediocre writing more than the magic itself.

    • @psx2codes1
      @psx2codes1 4 роки тому +5

      @Dillon Brunschon I was thinking of the same exact thing while watching this Paolini did a great magic system.
      Its not really 'entirely limited' by your knowledge of the elvish language though. You can use a very verbose spell to do something, but you may be able to accomplish the same task with one or two words [then again, certain defensive spells might've needed to be verbose to be safe/effective]. I think it had more to do with the user's creativity and concentration. In the end, didn't they also establish you could use any language to do magic, just that elvish was the safest means since it was sort of designed for magic long ago?

    • @psx2codes1
      @psx2codes1 4 роки тому +3

      @Dillon Brunschon Yeah that sounds about right. I haven't read this series in YEARS. I should read it again...

  • @stevenn1940
    @stevenn1940 4 роки тому +10

    side note, I feel like people forget just how dark star wars is sometimes.
    "I killed them, I killed them all. There dead. Every single one of them. But not just the men, but the women, and the children too. There like animals! And I slaughtered theme like animals!" That's genocide, dude!
    And, you know, slaughtering younglings.

  • @SeRgEaNt_RaNdOm
    @SeRgEaNt_RaNdOm 4 роки тому +62

    I love how you kept showing The Last Jedi related images whenever you were talking about things like plot holes, contradictions and writers either not knowing about or ignoring pre-existing lore

    • @Arcexey
      @Arcexey 4 роки тому +4

      Charlies Broom and yet the biggest of all is midichlorians. and yet he showed the prequels in favorable parts of the review. that's how bad the last jedi is. made some people forgive the canon ruining prequels.
      leia not remembering her mother. no mention of sith whatsoever in originals. obi wan not remembering r2d2. confusing mess with whether stormtroopers are people or clones in the OG??? emperor says lightsabers are only for jedi.
      prequels are just as bad if not worse in terms of errors and canon ruining.
      at least the prequels sort of feel like star wars? last jedi is a bizarre fuck mess

    • @niklasmolen4753
      @niklasmolen4753 4 роки тому +1

      Only the original movies have any logic. If you see them as fairy tales. The sequels (episodes 1-3 and 7-9 and detractors) are merely attempts to milk money from the Star Wars universe without any understanding of the world. They only use familiar names to make it seem as if they have something to do with each other. Disney made sure to completely shatter the last hope that remained.

    • @SeRgEaNt_RaNdOm
      @SeRgEaNt_RaNdOm 4 роки тому +4

      @@niklasmolen4753 The fact that the sequel movies had no plan for where the story was going to go proves what you're saying since Kathleen Kennedy allowed Rian Johnson to do whatever he wanted even though it had no connection to the previous movies and pre-existing lore and it ended up breaking the whole story going forward.

    • @higueraft571
      @higueraft571 4 роки тому +2

      Admittedly, of the two, it is safe to say that the Prequels are the lesser sin. Infact it primarily requires only some dialogue rewriting, and completely purging jarjar.
      The Sequel though, dear fucking god.
      Infact, if the rumors are true, prepare to *hate* episode 9, as it apparently gives as much respect to you as it gave Ackbar in 7, or when Rey became god, became a jedi master, killed a villain prematurely, broke the canon *royally,* and the list goes on.

    • @paulgrotebeverborg1119
      @paulgrotebeverborg1119 4 роки тому +3

      @@Arcexey the prequels are not so canon ruining as you say. Nothing in the originals contradicts the existence of midichlorians, the stormtroopers consist of both clones and normal humans, and would you properly remember your mother if she died the day of your birth?
      And for Obi Wan not remembering R2 the guy is an old man in A New Hope old people tend to forget things ;-)

  • @doomguy19931
    @doomguy19931 4 роки тому +17

    This was a great explanation. If you just say "soft magic has no rules," it makes it harder to use a soft magic system because that explanation makes no sense.

  • @mike7652
    @mike7652 4 роки тому +20

    I saw Shad uploaded a video, and I couldn't resist clicking and watching!
    I'm not saying Shad is a magical warlock, but I'm not saying he isn't either.
    (He likely is.)

  • @bakubread9308
    @bakubread9308 3 роки тому +4

    I know this is an old video but it just happens to be the one I'm on, and can I just say I absolutely love this channel? It's never about drama or anything, you're always striving to be as accurate and factual as possible, you admit when you get something wrong and you make great arguments when you believe you've been falsely told you were wrong. Also the fact that I can listen to these videos while doing other things makes it even more perfect.

  • @ZakuInATopHat
    @ZakuInATopHat 4 роки тому +11

    Summary:
    hard magic has many specific rules.
    Soft magic has a few hard rules and some soft rules.
    Ex;
    Hard: you need a wand. You must say a spell. The spell has to be perfect.etc.
    Soft: you need mana. You need matter. Knowing what your doing is optional, go have fun.

  • @TheDahaka1
    @TheDahaka1 4 роки тому +30

    When fighting the Balrog, Gandalf says:
    "I am a servant of the Secret Fire, wielder of the flame of Anor. ... The dark fire will not avail you, flame of Udûn"
    An anti-fire barrier is not really useful against a Staff Destruction spell from the Witch King XD

    • @Petaurista13
      @Petaurista13 4 роки тому +3

      He's Maiar, so in fact kind of god. He's probably immna to most of things.

    • @Real_MisterSir
      @Real_MisterSir 4 роки тому +6

      @@Petaurista13 No it is also stated that his powers as a Maiar are limited while existing on Earth. If he was at his actual full potential he could overthrow Sauron's armies singlehandedly, but its made clear that he is there to guide people - not to rule the world or decide who gets to live and die. That's also shown in the discussion he has with Frodo about the real difficulty is not about being able to take a life, but rather in when to spare one.
      There are so many small elements that subliminally set the basic rules of the soft magic that is being used in LotR, and Shad kinda glanced over most of it.

    • @R3GARnator
      @R3GARnator 4 роки тому +2

      Gandalf is the world's equivalent to a catholic angel.

    • @thinkwithurdipstick
      @thinkwithurdipstick 4 роки тому +4

      Ugh the stupid staff breaking thing. It was only in the movies, and it might be one of the dumber parts. Earlier we’re shown that Saruman’s staff breaks and this is supposed to be symbolic of the fact that Saruman has lost his power. So does it mean the same thing for Gandalf? It’s one of the places where Peter went a little over the top.

    • @thinkwithurdipstick
      @thinkwithurdipstick 4 роки тому +5

      Daniel Kemnitz Shad kind of neglects the fact that a lot of the magic in LotR, especially in the movies, comes from the rings. Most magic we see Gandalf use comes from his ownership of the ring of fire. Also, even unrestrained I doubt Gandalf could defeat Sauron single-handedly. They’re similar beings, both maia, but Sauron is far stronger than Gandalf, at least as far as we would define strength and power here. They have different strengths, Sauron’s being brute force and an utter will to dominate while Gandalf’s are his compassion and his ability to motivate people.

  • @testaccount1988
    @testaccount1988 4 роки тому +3

    I have a nice fantasy story in my mind, sadly im not a talented writer, and i dont even have the patience to pull this out, but the story is awesome.
    You explaining how plot holes can be avoided, or basically what to pay attention to helps a lot, building the base concepts of that universe.
    Thank you very much!:)

  • @lucho9911
    @lucho9911 4 роки тому +34

    LoTR : soft magic
    Gandalf : Soft eh? why dont you go ask that Balrug if im soft xD
    love the vid and content!! keep it up shad

    • @w1ndgeneral226
      @w1ndgeneral226 4 роки тому +2

      Sauron: *YOU CALL ME "SOFT" MORTAL?!*

  • @jirimothejzik5389
    @jirimothejzik5389 4 роки тому +30

    "Hard magic" the way I would define it, is explainable, quantifiable and replicable. It has a clearly defined source, always produces the same result under the same conditions, can be described with mathematical equations established through observation and accurate predictions can be made based on that math. In some ways, magic would probably be quite similar to using a plastic "magic wand", performing the "magic ritual" of rubbing it on your hair, and then use it to bend a narrow stream of water without touching (just maybe on a different scale, to make it interesting). The quote about a sufficiently advanced technology being indistinguishable from magic comes to mind :-)

    • @vsm1456
      @vsm1456 4 роки тому +4

      like magic in video games (except when there's a plot event and some rules usually go out the window at that point :D)

    • @nazrael8826
      @nazrael8826 4 роки тому +2

      Basically Nasuverse and Hunter x Hunter 'magic' system. Extremely systematic and well explained

    • @Gadget-Walkmen
      @Gadget-Walkmen 4 роки тому

      Well said

  • @jebalitabb8228
    @jebalitabb8228 4 роки тому +52

    I’ve never been a fan of the fantasy genre but I’m about a hour into Shad’s book and loving it, the world building is honestly amazing

    • @jebalitabb8228
      @jebalitabb8228 4 роки тому

      IngLouisSchreurs lol same but like my usual favs are stuff like the 50 shades series. I found LOTR boring but I’ve listened to his book for like 3ish hours straight now, it’s like a movie

    • @jebalitabb8228
      @jebalitabb8228 4 роки тому

      Dillon Brunschon I’ve tried it before it’s just too slow for my taste lol, tho I can tell they’re objectively extremely well written

    • @jebalitabb8228
      @jebalitabb8228 4 роки тому +1

      Dillon Brunschon it’s definitely weird reading out songs, that’s the type of stuff that should’ve been saved for the movie imo

  • @KonradZielinski
    @KonradZielinski 4 роки тому +2

    My favourit failure in application of magic is characters who forget they can fly whenever the plot requies that they fall down somewhere.

  • @kayagoksoy
    @kayagoksoy 4 роки тому +6

    Shad. Shad. Shad my lad. I like your work. Gandalf doesn't do magic left and right because it is forbidden for him to use it against an entity lower than him. You should have known this by now.

    • @shadiversity
      @shadiversity  4 роки тому +3

      Viewers should not have to rely on external material for a story and its elements to make sense.

    • @kayagoksoy
      @kayagoksoy 4 роки тому +2

      And on account of the movie version of Gandalf vs Witch King, if you actually think about it for a second you will understand what is happening there.
      Gandalf broke Saruman's staff with a word, showing off that he is way more powerful. Witch King lifts his sword and says "this is my hour" and breaks Gandalf's staff to his surprise. See? No? Sauron has grown so powerful that his minion is surpassing a Maiar of his own stature.

    • @kayagoksoy
      @kayagoksoy 4 роки тому +1

      And a lightsaber is traditionally without a crossguard because the crystals function with a %100 capacity and force. Kylo has a crossguard not by design but by necessity since his kyber crystal is shattered and is unbalanced. The crossguard part is an exhaust. If you try to put a crossguard section onto a normal lightsaber you would be holding 3 lightsabers stick to each other.

    • @kayagoksoy
      @kayagoksoy 4 роки тому +1

      @@shadiversity To which part you are answering with this? In gandalf's case both scenes are in the movie. And primarily its a book adaptation that is over 11 hours, see the problem mate?

    • @bumponalog5001
      @bumponalog5001 4 роки тому +6

      @@shadiversity Technically the movies are the "external material".

  • @TheVoltarus
    @TheVoltarus 4 роки тому +12

    A bit random, but the quote from your book that stuck most with me is "You do not fork."

  • @jonathanrobinson319
    @jonathanrobinson319 4 роки тому +40

    Fullmetal alchemist brotherhood have the best hard magic system:
    Respect for the laws of physics and a plausible energy source.

    • @zynx1828
      @zynx1828 4 роки тому +9

      You mean furrumettaruu arechimistu brudhahoodu?

    • @macksonedinis3670
      @macksonedinis3670 4 роки тому +2

      hunter x hunter is the best

    • @johnathanera5863
      @johnathanera5863 4 роки тому +1

      @@macksonedinis3670 disagree. Its tied with FMAB. Its definitely not "better". Its the best in shounen, thats for sure.

    • @zynx1828
      @zynx1828 4 роки тому +3

      Opinions r opinions tho we can all agree there both recommended to watch

    • @gossemstuff3255
      @gossemstuff3255 4 роки тому

      @@zynx1828 Ah, I see that you are a follower of the great Nux Taku as well

  • @Dasacht095
    @Dasacht095 4 роки тому +49

    Hi Shadowversity, just to throw my two cent for Gandalf and his magic. The movies are rotten for explaining them, whereas the novels actually give a far more clever explanation than the films.
    In the Hobbit when Gandalf saves the dwarves from the goblins, his bright light is described for us as readers as "smelling of gun powder" and the following scenes in the trees of Gandalf lighting pine cones for dwarves to lob at wolves, everything has a hint of being explainable.
    Things like his wizard duel with saruman or fighting the necromancer are never fleshed out and kept vague.
    And a perfect example of books explaining the magic much better than film is the destruction of the gate of Minis Tirath. But at this point a lot of Gandalf's magic as Gandalf the white seems to be vaguer but more powerful.
    The orcs are described as using a good few different battering rams but none can break the gate, the use of the massive boar ram might be just film I cannot recall but it was the Witch King who busts the gate with a spell and tries to step through first in the books.
    But Gandalf stands against him, no combat no encounter, just a stare off, we are left to wonder if Gandalf used magic to barrier the gate and perhaps the witch king just doesnt have an answer to Gandalf's power but no one enters mines tirith to my memory.
    This gets interrupted by the most beautiful cavalry charge in all of cinema and novels ofc but it is always implied neither side budged until the Witch King pulled back to get his felbeast and try and command a defence from Rohan's Last Charge.
    The novels always made Gandalf as The Grey seem like his magic was from something cunning or mundane used beyond the average lotr persons comprehension.
    Whereas Gandalf the Whites seems like it stemed from the Valar themselves, who have no ceiling to their power so him being far more power and near omniscient can be understood.
    Sorry for any mistakes in remembering I just wanted to give my piece on Gandalf and his magic

    • @thinkwithurdipstick
      @thinkwithurdipstick 4 роки тому +13

      The standoff at the gate, Gandalf wasn’t preventing anyone from entering the city, not by magic at least. He went down to face the Witch King, to confront him before he could enter. The men didn’t interfere out of shock and fear of the Witch King and the orcs didn’t interfere for, well, much the same reason. Gandalf’s purpose in confronting him isn’t to hold him back with magic or anything, it’s merely to set an example, to defy the Witch King in his moment of triumph so as to give the men of Gondor hope. That’s usually what his role was for most of his time in Middle Earth, the Rohirrim arrive just in time to distract the Witch King and drag his attention elsewhere.
      Most magic Gandalf actually does is connected to his possession of the ring of fire, and other stuff described as ‘magic’ is merely described as such by the hobbits, who are the narrators of both the hobbit and LotR. Things that seem mystical to them they attribute to magic as a means of explaining it, even if it wasn’t really magic at all, mainly because their knowledge and understanding of the world outside the shire is relatively very limited.

    • @Mnnvint
      @Mnnvint 4 роки тому +5

      @@thinkwithurdipstick Gandalf's magic is mostly about lighting fires, physically and metaphorically.

    • @TheNoonish
      @TheNoonish 3 роки тому +11

      In the books, the Witch King and Gandalf never clashed. I always thought it was stupid for the films to give the Witch King a victory over Gandalf, especially when they didn't bother fleshing out the prophecy of the Witch King's Doom. Then he spares Gandalf for no reason other than plot armor.
      The book actually creates a *well-done* subversion where the mightiest warriors on each side, Gandalf and the Witch King, are staring each other down, ready for an epic duel, but they each get diverted from their opponent for different reasons. Gandalf had to go save Faramir because it was a job he alone could do-there were plenty of men to fight, but nobody else to defy Denethor (aside from Beregond). As a result, the Witch King kills Theoden and all his personal guard save Eowyn.
      It doesn't create the "What an idiot" moment of the Witch King deciding not to take five seconds to kill a helpless Gandalf before heading out to face the Rohirrim. He didn't do that in the books because he wasn't certain he could defeat Gandalf, and it would cost valuable time regardless while the Rohirrim were attacking from the rear.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 роки тому +1

      In the Hobbit movies that was what he did with the pine cones.

    • @ano_nym
      @ano_nym 3 роки тому +6

      @@TheNoonish as with the last point, for the Witch King and Gandalf. I feel that it would be strange if he could actually defeat him, since at his core he stems from a man, whereas Gandalf is a Maia(spelling). They are both also wielding rings of power, and I don't know if there is anything about the power levels of the different rings, but it feels reasonable if the elven rings were more powerful than the rings of men.
      Not disagreeing with your point, just that my bet would be on Gandalf if they were actually facing off.

  • @nicodemusedwards6931
    @nicodemusedwards6931 4 роки тому +7

    *Sees Vader as the image for Hard Magic and remembers the time a Sith Lord threw a star and another went around draining worlds of life Galactus Style*
    Yeah... very hard magic system the force has.

    • @varvarith3090
      @varvarith3090 4 роки тому +1

      Wizard of space magic intended for children.

    • @phenjaws569
      @phenjaws569 4 роки тому +1

      Well, within the original trilogy and the prequels, what Jedi and Sith can do is pretty limited when you look at it.

    • @shadiversity
      @shadiversity  4 роки тому +4

      It's actually a very well defined system if you stick to the origional trilogy, but then things get a bit out of hand.

    • @goldensimp7729
      @goldensimp7729 4 роки тому +1

      @@shadiversity I would argue that throwing suns around and draining planets of their lives aren't breaking the rules that hard. The sun is a thing, and you can affect it with the force, just like a person or a tank. Some FUs can throw people around, others can fling tanks around like ragdolls. Moving a sun just needs some hardcore powerlevel, like how you could move a sun IRL with enough real force. The planetary vampirism is an extension of the whole "universal field of life force that is everywhere" and gives it a darker use, like bringing back the dead( darth Plaguesis)

    • @nicodemusedwards6931
      @nicodemusedwards6931 4 роки тому +1

      Shadiversity I have to disagree. We never really get introduced to any limitations with The Force, or rather we never see or hear about anything it can’t do. We don’t see it do much in the original trilogy, but how much of that is actual limitations with the force and how much is either the budget or the characters simply not choosing to do something.

  • @Stratelier
    @Stratelier 4 роки тому +8

    I love the rule you define with soft magic: Every time the magic *does* something, you are declaring that the magic *can* do that.

  • @johnlab9279
    @johnlab9279 4 роки тому +14

    something to note:
    if you allow a soft magic system enough time to cover a large amount of abilities being show, it displays so many allowed or unhallowed things that it turns itself into a hard magic system because the rules can be constructed by the information you have been given.

    • @MerkhVision
      @MerkhVision 4 роки тому

      Good point! Thats what eventually happens in Harry Potter by the end.

    • @opinionofmine3238
      @opinionofmine3238 4 роки тому

      Not really... a reader being able to infer rules out of a magic system isn't really something that makes those rules defined. If we only see spells using magic from the four basic elements, that doesn't imply that only those kinds of spells can be used within the magic system.

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro 4 роки тому

      @@opinionofmine3238 I think incompatibility of Quantum Physic and Theory or Relativism is good example here. Those are to walid scientific theories, which we know that they work (hard), but for some reason we cant connect them together. What is in fact common case with Soft Magic Systems.

    • @opinionofmine3238
      @opinionofmine3238 4 роки тому

      @@TheRezro you forget a very important aspect about science. We don't know how things work. A 'valid' scientific theory, by definition, is just a theory that has not been proven wrong yet and can be proven wrong (with theories that can't be proven wrong yet claim to be scientific being what is called 'pseudoscience'). Anything beyond what we already saw worked or didn't work, on an individual basis, is fundamentally based on conjecture and just waiting to be proven wrong. Newtonian physics, for instance, were considered to be immutable, the fundamental thing holding our scientific understanding of those fields together, and indeed, Isaac Newton was a genius, but in the end of the day those ideas of his were proven to be incomplete if not outright wrong depending on your perspective.
      So if you were to compare our universe to a magic system, then it would be a full soft magic system. We never truly know how things work, because as soon as we find a principle, we just jump to a higher question of what makes that principle in turn work, and eventually we find exceptions to every rule.

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro 4 роки тому

      @@opinionofmine3238 No, I didn't. Just it isn't relevant to point of the debate.
      "with theories that can't be proven wrong yet claim to be scientific being what is called 'pseudoscience'"
      I presume you meant "can be proven wrong?
      "Isaac Newton was a genius, but in the end of the day those ideas of his were proven to be incomplete if not outright wrong depending on your perspective"
      Only incomplete. His laws are still used.
      "So if you were to compare our universe to a magic system, then it would be a full soft magic system"
      No. Those systems still have rules. Hard systems.
      "because as soon as we find a principle, we just jump to a higher question of what makes that principle in turn work, and eventually we find exceptions to every rule."
      And how hard systems are different? They can be incorrect or incomplete. What define them if fact that they have rules. Lighting hit tree because it was highest point on plain, not because Zeus didn't like it... probably?

  • @Sombre_gd
    @Sombre_gd 3 роки тому +18

    I think one of the best systems of hard magic is in "Once upon a time" series where there was only one rule of magic: it always come with the price. And boy, this price was often BRUTAL.

    • @Nuvizzle
      @Nuvizzle 3 роки тому +8

      The Lord of the Rings follows that rule, more or less, but in its case it's power that always comes with a price, whether that power is magical or not. For example when Gandalf the Grey is reincarnated as Gandalf the White, he's given more freedom to use his power, but the cost of that is he must leave Middle-Earth once his task is complete. Those who refuse to pay the price for their power always face the consequences in the end, whether it's the other Maiar (Gandalf's species) falling to corruption and becoming Balrogs, or the fall of Numenor and the decline of the kingdom of men.

  • @orange-micro-fiber9740
    @orange-micro-fiber9740 4 роки тому +8

    6:23 So glad you put Mistborn in here. Sanderson is my go-to example of hard magic systems.

  • @Janoha17
    @Janoha17 4 роки тому +99

    "Gandalf only uses a particular use of magic once."
    Now I know why D&D Wizards lose the spells they cast.

    • @BlueSun_
      @BlueSun_ 4 роки тому +10

      D&D Wizards are more based on the work of Jack Vance than Tolkien

    • @danielsantarosa101
      @danielsantarosa101 4 роки тому +4

      They don't! Not in 5e at least, just in older editions

    • @ecthelionalfa
      @ecthelionalfa 4 роки тому

      This remind me of dragonlance that when a wizard use a spell they forget said spell meaning that they need to relearn the spell again

    • @LecherousLizard
      @LecherousLizard 4 роки тому

      Discworld be like.

    • @nathankurtz8045
      @nathankurtz8045 4 роки тому +1

      @Leo Cook They certainly can and do, just not with spells and not within the timeline of a normal campaign as they require a lot of time, resources, and skill to craft. Xanathar's Guide to Everything presents a set of rules for players crafting magic items, and it's open-ended enough to allow obtaining the gold, ingredients, and recipe to each take an adventure's worth of effort to obtain.
      Also the item you're thinking of is the Stone of Controlling Earth Elementals (5e dmg pg. 205).

  • @dudeguy8686
    @dudeguy8686 4 роки тому +24

    The Wheel of Time was an awesome presentation of soft magic, the rules of it being largely forgotten by even the Aes Sedai, and the common person knowing nearly nothing about it. It was an effective way of bringing the reader along on that path of discovery. Even the conclusion made sense in the context of the magic system, but I won't say much about that besides "I win again, Lews Therin"
    On another note, The Dresden Files made for a good soft magic system as well. Even though nearly everything is possible, the rules set on the system fairly limits the use of magic. It made being clever more effective than being "all powerful". Besides, where else can you see a wizard dual-wielding a staff and a shotgun?

    • @Reddotzebra
      @Reddotzebra 4 роки тому +3

      In the second era of Mistborn, you can even see a wizard using a shotgun like the FaN from Team Fortress 2 and make it fit in a hard magic system.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 4 роки тому +1

      … whilst riding a T-rex!

  • @Nick-yz9fd
    @Nick-yz9fd 4 роки тому +8

    For some reason I thought of how the "magic" in the movie Ghost works. Swayze's character can't manipulate the real world, except accidentally, until he meets the subway ghost who teaches him how to focus. The magic exists, is accessible to some, has limitations, and is used well without being silly.

  • @Dragnfly_mynamewastaken
    @Dragnfly_mynamewastaken 4 роки тому +5

    Jojo: step 1 - introduce the mystery of the power. step 2 - characters learn (or villain explains to viewer) how the power works. step 3 - apply the power's rules in completely unique, roundabout ways to have power do things it previously seemed like it couldn't.

    • @erykoman1237
      @erykoman1237 4 роки тому +1

      Step 4 - defeat the main villain by deus ex machina

  • @theoldone22
    @theoldone22 4 роки тому +64

    I'd like to defend The Lord of the Rings books by saying JRR Tolkien was dead long before the movies were made and they took a lot of liberties with it. The books were very different and the Hobbit movies were far worse about that.

    • @aBoogivogi
      @aBoogivogi 4 роки тому +8

      The Hobbit movies are made for a crowd that saw LOTR while the book is a slightly dark childrens fairy tale about defeating a dragon. Even if they didn't stretch it to three hours and introduce a boring villain they would run into severe issues trying to adapt it. Also while I have tried reading the books I would say the movies did for the most part do a great job in terms of adapting the books to something I would watch as I gave them up due to far to much time wasted trying to establish aspects of the universe I just didn't care for with respect to the story itself.

    • @jordanjames2956
      @jordanjames2956 4 роки тому +3

      The hobbit movies were made the way they were to better appeal to non western audiences.

    • @tommerker8063
      @tommerker8063 4 роки тому +12

      @@jordanjames2956 the hobbit movies were made this way to squeeze even the last drop of money from gullable people

    • @Garry_Combine
      @Garry_Combine 4 роки тому +2

      @@jordanjames2956 you mean the Chinese market, right? I agree.

    • @Ninjaananas
      @Ninjaananas 4 роки тому

      @@Garry_Combine
      How? Did Tolkien mention Tibet, democracy or Hongkong?

  • @davidscarpa1336
    @davidscarpa1336 4 роки тому +24

    Every time Shad says "Litch King" a little piece of me dies...

    • @lillyanneserrelio2187
      @lillyanneserrelio2187 4 роки тому +3

      He never says it 3x in row or he will appear, like Beetlejuice or the Candyman

    • @azarlgor
      @azarlgor 4 роки тому +4

      It made me actually imagine Gandalf facing off against the Lich King. (not a very fair matchup) :D

    • @lillyanneserrelio2187
      @lillyanneserrelio2187 4 роки тому +1

      @@azarlgor yeah not fair at all. Gandalf will have to get killed and rezzed past "the grey", white, and whatever other color upgrades until he reaches the final color level and then _maybe_ Gandalf might last more than a single blow. Lich King is just so OP vs. the magic presented within LOTR.

    • @alexjones2004
      @alexjones2004 4 роки тому +2

      @@lillyanneserrelio2187 Wait which lich king are yall talking about?

    • @maxthommesen9315
      @maxthommesen9315 4 роки тому +2

      Not Litch... Lich King lol

  • @Songfugel
    @Songfugel 4 роки тому +11

    Loved the video, and particularly the early rant about dismissive arguments about breaking magic rules in a set system. Also I'd like to add a small correction, which is that while the analogy works due to general misinformation, but in truth no one actually quite knows how gravity works

    • @Eryna_
      @Eryna_ 3 роки тому

      That's literally... Everything though. Gravity is still a guess, if a really, really, really, really, REALLY good guess.

    • @Songfugel
      @Songfugel 3 роки тому +1

      @@Eryna_ True, but with other forces we have empirical evidence of why they work and what fields/particles are transferring the forces ie. What makes them tick.
      With gravity however, all we have is guesses, haven't observed anything that actually transfers the force, and we have zero clue how it works (or rather, why it does seem to work) at quantum level. We are speculating there is a theory of quantum gravity that is the basis of all other physics at the primal level, yet have 0 actual proof/knowledge of it being a thing or not
      So in the field of theoretical physics, gravity is pretty high on the "mmm, absolutely maybe" scale