@Lucidnonsense I like the sound of that! Would they be a mage themselves, or just a muggle with cybernetics?
@Lucidnonsense I like the sound of that! Would they be a mage themselves, or just a muggle with cybernetics?
@Lucidnonsense
@JohnSolaris and I actually discussed this, though not to the extent I'll go into it, and some of the undiscussed info may be reworked later. Essentially, the obligatory Background Magic Field "flows" in a way that's something like a river, with any given individual's magical power being akin to an offshoot stream - the bigger the stream, the more power flowing through them that they can channel into effects. The logical conclusion is that a fair number of people simply aren't connected to the river at all, and thus cannot use magic, and it's not always clear-cut as to which children receive the ability to use magic, though it is more likely for a mage to have mage offspring than not. For most of those who are mages, the metaphorical stream is relatively small and unlikely to widen all too much even with concentrated practice through their lifetime, as mentioned in the OP, and in any case doesn't "want" to be used for any other purpose than destroying things ("directing large amounts of energy in a way that tends toward damaging the target", if we want to give a more physical explanation) in a manner that's vaguely allegorical to how water doesn't "want" to flow uphill, thus magic tending toward being more low fantasy than high fantasy.
In other words, mages have innate access to magic basically because they got lucky, and there isn't any particularly convenient way for muggles to gain access to it automatically. "Wizardry Works Weirdly", is a saying that mages sometimes use.
@Lucidnonsense No, no, and no. Sapient beings have the capacity to use magic actively as described above, and over the course of Earth's history, a very, VERY few beings could utilise it passively, e.g. dragons, but in the modern day, the only beings with that sort of passive magic are Draconids, who have acquired dragon DNA themselves, and who are more likely to be mages regardless. And, well... you could channel a fairly large amount of magic through an animal and probably destroy their brain and maybe their entire body in the process, but why would you? There's no particular benefit to it, since you probably have to be there to channel it through them anyway, and could just as readily blow the target up.
@Kafka Komedy Sounds good to me.
Oh, and just in case this wasn't made clear in the OP: the Ordo Obscurum that was keeping magic secret no longer exists, having disbanded when magic was revealed to the world. Unless somebody happens to have an interesting idea for working with a remnant of the group or something, it's not going to be a major part of the RP. Just so everybody knows. I think it was pointed out well enough, but whatever.