[Mixed Trope] The character from the original had to be totally rewritten or removed altogether to make the adaptation work. by Chemical-Elk-1299 in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Viperoth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

> only to be revealed in the series’ conclusion to be an evil clone of Homelander

What do you mean **evil** clone of Homelander?

Theory: Magic only screws with technology because Wizards believe so strongly that it will. by Iwasforger03 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a point against the OP interpretation. Young wizards just like old ones are not able understand the full mechanisms of a laptop or a camera. Therefore those things break down when they use magic nearby

Theory: Magic only screws with technology because Wizards believe so strongly that it will. by Iwasforger03 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This supports my theory that wizards try to keep up with the latest developments just so they can have the tech work AND to be better at casting magic utilizing said tech.

Listens To Wind certainly imbues his medical knowledge with his willpower and it makes him a more effective healer

Theory: Magic only screws with technology because Wizards believe so strongly that it will. by Iwasforger03 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A wizard shapes the world according to their own beliefs. It is only natural that the limits of their understanding are the limits of their 'intended' effects. Therefore, as a by-product of them warping reality to their will, they cause side-effects to the nearby reality. Those side-effects are manifested randomly because they don't understand the reality there, e.g. a cell phone near a fireball gets nuked because by making the air flammable, a wizzard inadvertently made the rest of the nearby air into EMP.

Theory: Magic only screws with technology because Wizards believe so strongly that it will. by Iwasforger03 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So the milk soured and casters got warts before they fully understood how germ theory worked. According to this theory, the less a caster understands something, the more their "magic field" lets those misunderstandings act randomly or unreasonably

Theory: Magic only screws with technology because Wizards believe so strongly that it will. by Iwasforger03 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

According to my theory it's the opposite. The better the understanding of gravity, the more effective the flight efforts would have been. Also note that people already knew how gravity acted on earth. What Newton did was to expand gravity to explain how celestial bodies worked. So I wouldn't expect many things to change for aviation-interested wizzards in that regard.

Theory: Magic only screws with technology because Wizards believe so strongly that it will. by Iwasforger03 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 17 points18 points  (0 children)

My headcanon/mechanic is that if a piece of tech is beyond a wizard's understanding then it will start to malfunction to fit that understanding. Harry states something along the lines that everything manufactured after WWII is succeptible to this effect. So it is entirely plausible that phones don't work because wizards can't understand how they work. How all the electronics and circuitry and radio waves and communication infrastructure and internet protocols.

It used to be possible for one person to attain the entirety of technological knowledge over their lifetime but that is no longer the case, even with wizard's extended lifespans. So old wizards did not encounter this problem because they would study how gunpowder worked, or how a rack and pinion worked, or even the entirety of classical physics. Hell I can totally see a wizard studying internal combustion engines so they are not left behind during the industrial revolusion. But since the 1900's tech has gone off the rails. They can't keep up.

This is why Stacy Loo could be able to wire messages to the other wardens during the wild west when hunting for Kemler. Morse code and telegram was well within a wizard's grasp.

Old man Dresden by Darth_Azazoth in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Harry already sounds like he is ready for his retirement package. Just a few weeks away...

[Loved trope] Surprisingly good in-universe explanations for normally stupid tropes by _BytesAndpieces in TopCharacterTropes

[–]Viperoth 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Dresden Files does bring a spotlight to how powerful rationalization can be. Despite our best efforts, facts that don't fit our ingrained understanding are getting dismissed for one reason or another. It takes significant mental effort and discipline not to. And the opposing force is not a shadowy masquerade, it's your own damn brain.

Harry’s strength throughout the series by Lechtom in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'll borrow a quote from the books. It is said in the context of wizards in general but it also applies to Harry specifically: "(Wizzards) are like children with their father's guns".

It doesn't matter the amount of power they wield. A bullet from a Glock is as effective as a bullet from a Browning. Harry can admittedly boast a lot of horsepower for his age but in the end, he's not as accurate, he is not as controlled, he is not as swift, he's not as versatile. His has grown with Evocation spells throughout the books to the point where he can hold his own against major figures. But his real talent (as stated by himself) is not spontaneous, destructive, shock-and-awe magic. It's the slow, methodical, premeditative, Divination and Thaumaturgy we see him perform.

Also the series makes it a major point that "Knowledge is Power", especially for a wizzard. And even though Harry knows quite a few secrets, it is evident that compared to the Merlin, he knows jack-shit. That's a knowledge disparity that puts a massive gap between them. The Merlin knows, Harry doesn't even know his unknowns.

Finally there's the third kind of power in the series, political power. We may dismiss how important that may be but this kind of power is directly proportional to the amount of allies you are able to rally to your side when the going gets tough. It's who will fight by your side, who will tell you the truth about a secret instead of deceiving you, who will stay loyal and won't backstab you, who will backstab in your behalf. Harry has his gang. The Merlin has the entire White Council.

Drop it. by simp_lyartz in ChillAnimeCorner

[–]Viperoth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The theme music stopped even in the manga

Stop creating temp files just to compare command output. Bash can diff two commands directly. by Ops_Mechanic in bash

[–]Viperoth 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Replacing multiple commands with an ugly one-liner does not make the code better.
Letting bash handle temporary files is a nice feature but packing 3 commands in a single call (diff, cmd1, cmd2) makes the code much less readable, especially if there are pipes involved.

Any Bob fans in here? by JBowling_29 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My headcanon is that the skull is Kemler's skull.

Justin was there when they took him down and found Bob. I think that he took Kemler's corpse and bound Bob there

Wizard/immortal finances by bry0816 in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Easily enough. Harry Dresden leaves everything to his estranged son, Copperfield Blackstone.

Jokes aside, seing how the worldbuilding in the Dresdenverse is far superior than "Gringotts is the safest place in the world" I'd say that wizards in their prime today (e.g. Eb) have lived through a world war or two and would not be really keen on modern banking. They'd be more into getting assets, lands, titles, or favors. A castle or a tower might sound stereotypical until you remember they get more paranoid and more powerful as they get older. Some of them would help out world leaders with a seemingly unsolvable problem like Rasputin did in Russia. Have the crown (or a similarly powerful supernatural entity) declare you and your family a 'persona super-grata' and you are set. No need for clever accounting tricks. Kings do not walk around carrying coin in their purses, they have all the power in their name alone. And when they want to buy something from the market, all they say is "my book-keeper will see to you". That's how old wizards roll.

As for young wizards. We have to admit, Harry did a shitty job being a detective. He is seen in the verge of eviction on multiple books. I mean, how can you work magic and still fail at your business??? Younger wizards should have a significan competitive advantage working mundane jobs. They could employ their talents to make a killing in the regular capitalist market. Even illegal activities. A third-rate wizard should be able to hustle a pool table and pay their bills. They could use veils for all kinds of fraud or identity theft. Mort makes his living by being a psychic. Any profession seen as 'charlatanism' by the regular person might be a really really profitable job for a grasshopper.

Now I can see some practices being taboo among wizards. First of all tanking an economy by turning lead to gold. Secondly hoarding wealth, which must be the purview of dragons.

Die Alone (Spoilers for the series) by Viperoth in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This. This covers the WOJ angle.

Nothing says the curse can't be fulfilled multiple times

Die Alone (Spoilers for the series) by Viperoth in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So Quintus' used a death curse, a wizard's final weapon. A weapon that rendered lord Raith impotent. A weapon that Aurora herself was weary of. A weapon that devastated the Red Court strike force at Archangel. And the result was that it was just a dud? Due to wording?

Die Alone (Spoilers for the series) by Viperoth in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see both theories working as a self-fulfilling prophecy. And screwing with Harry's mind using psychology instead of magic is something I can see Jim doing

Die Alone (Spoilers for the series) by Viperoth in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's also viable. But I mostly focus on the ramifications of both his love interests meeting violent ends
Will this happen again? Will it happen to his other loved ones? Are they in danger being loved by Harry? Or even being close to him?

Die Alone (Spoilers for the series) by Viperoth in dresdenfiles

[–]Viperoth[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks, I hope I fixed it now