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Element: Sky (yes, another thread on elemental magic)

Devor

Fiery DEATH!
Moderator
I'm thinking about incorporating elemental magic as a piece of my WIP. It's based in an Asian-themed setting, and elemental magics are common and popular in these settings. I also have a system for how the magic works that will be easy enough to incorporate without it overrunning the story.

But if I use elemental magic, I want it to feel foreign, and not be limited to the standard European 4, earth, fire, wind and water. That means adding elements like wood, metal and void. I've mostly got a good grip on those.

I just can't find a precedent for Sky as an element and what that would mean. It's included on a number of elemental lists from real life belief systems, but I don't have any idea as to what it would mean as a form of magic.

Does anyone have a thought as to what a "Sky wizard" might look like? Is there a precedent, maybe in gaming, that I'm just not aware of? I'm hoping to find a way to define Sky as opposite of Void, rather than as another word for wind.

I searched for and pulled up about a dozen old threads on elemental magic before posting this - none of them mentioned sky as an element.
 

Azza

Journeyman
Hi Devor,
Forgive me if I'm interpreting what your asking for in the wrong way and this doesn't actually make sense. In Japanese philosophy, Ku means the sky and is also known as 'void' or 'heaven'. It represents our ability to think and to communicate, as well as our creativity. It can also be associated with power, creativity, spontaneity, and inventiveness. If you are searching for an image and generic idea for a "sky wizard" then perhaps something akin to the stereo-typical angel, fair skinned, curly hair, attractive, (even possessing white, dove-like wings if you fancy it).

"A warrior properly attuned to the Void can sense their surroundings and act without thinking, and without using their physical senses."

Hope this helps in some way.
 

A. E. Lowan

Dark Lord
Hi Devor,
Forgive me if I'm interpreting what your asking for in the wrong way and this doesn't actually make sense. In Japanese philosophy, Ku means the sky and is also known as 'void' or 'heaven'. It represents our ability to think and to communicate, as well as our creativity. It can also be associated with power, creativity, spontaneity, and inventiveness. If you are searching for an image and generic idea for a "sky wizard" then perhaps something akin to the stereo-typical angel, fair skinned, curly hair, attractive, (even possessing white, dove-like wings if you fancy it).

"A warrior properly attuned to the Void can sense their surroundings and act without thinking, and without using their physical senses."

Hope this helps in some way.

From my reading of what you're saying, it sounds like "void," "heaven," and "sky" might be interchangeable, or at least tightly interconnected. Is that a correct interpretation?
 

Scribble

Shadow Lord
In thinking about what we attribute to the "sky", we've got air and wind and light. The sky is really is a sea of air, and the keys to manipulating it would appear to be the control of pressure and currents and temperature.

Atmospherics:

Control of the "weather". At the low end of skill, manipulating air pressure and currents to create effects such as wind or mist, and at the high end of control, clouds, storms, lightning. Think about Storm of the X-Men for some ideas.

Weather forecasting.

Atmospheric optics:

Control of atmospheric optics. This is still manipulating air pressures and currents, but specialized in the use of light to create illusions: rainbows, false moons, red moons, red sky (or other colors). Auroras. Perhaps even more elaborate illusions at a higher level of mastery.

Manipulation of air, gases:

By manipulation of pressures and currents, drain the oxygen out of an area to make a kill-zone.

Create a "blanket" of lighter gases to lift heavy things, or even to create a sort of flying carpet effect (helium captured in a bubble of sorts.

Temperature control:

Heat and cool the air rapidly... combine with wind control to create at high levels a "furnace wind", which might ignite dry leaves or branches, or a "glacial blast" which could freeze.

HTH
 

Devor

Fiery DEATH!
Moderator
From my reading of what you're saying, it sounds like "void," "heaven," and "sky" might be interchangeable, or at least tightly interconnected. Is that a correct interpretation?

I think that is what he's saying.

A lot of Asian cultures have a concept for the "fifth element" that uses similar terms, and each understands it a little different. In some ways what I'm hoping to do is divide that fifth element into separate areas.
 

Azza

Journeyman
Yes I think you are right, its a term that can be any one of those three things, sky, heaven and void.
 

Spider

Mystagogue
Maybe there could be different types of sky wizards... or their appearance and powers could change as the day passes by. During the day, they could be an embodiment of light, and as it gets darker they resemble more of a night sky wizard? I think it would be cool if their skin was actually the sky's pattern. When the day is cloudy, they are grayish in color, when it's nighttime they're a deep blue/black with glowing stars. Or it could be the other way around-- the sky could change depending on their mood. If they're really angry, they can create huge thunderstorms!
 

Mythopoet

Dark Lord
For myself, a "sky" as an "element" makes no sense to me. The sky is a place, a location, not a substance or element. Also "void" as an element seems problematic to me. A void is a space containing nothing. How do you work magic with nothing?
 

Queshire

Dark Lord
The manga Reborn uses Sky as an element, along with such things as mist, sun, storms, thunder, and so on. However, sky in that setting is something of the alpha element, so instead of having its own niche it could do all the things that the other elements can do, so it might be what you're looking for. Let's look at sky as a concept. When you think of the sky, particularly as used in fiction, what does it commonly symbolize? The idea of the blue, blue sky makes me think of "Freedom" or "Infinity." The starry night sky makes me think of "Secrets" and "Mystery," and in a similar vein, the idea of the Akashic Records Akashic Records - Television Tropes & Idioms is named after the Sanskrit word for sky or space, so you could go with "Knowledge," and finally, if you want it to be the opposite of void you could have it be creation / conjuring magic and invoke a lot of cloud imagery with how clouds appear out of nowhere (well, they appear due to water condensation but we can't see that, so for symbolic purposes clouds are created out of nothing) as well as how staring up at the clouds / looking for shapes in the clouds is connected with daydreaming and from that to creativity.
 

Svrtnsse

Staff
Article Team
I'm hesitant to use the word "element" to describe sky. Sky is too wide a concept to fit into the idea of a single element or building block.

I know you're basing it on an Asian-themed setting, but if you have western readers they will bring with them their western expectations and associations which may not react favorably to sky as an element. Better words in my opinion would be groupings, such as Realm, School or Domain.

So, anyway...
The sky is an ever present part of life, unless you're indoors or underground or under water, but even then you know it's there. The sky is also intangible. No matter how high you climb you will never be able to touch the sky.
Not even when you fly can you touch the sky. You will be in the sky and it will be all around you, but you still can't touch it. You're only touching air, or wind, or birds, flies, clouds or rain - not sky.
Other things that are equally ever-present (with exceptions) are our senses. As such Sky magic can be used to enhance or delude the senses. A master of Sky magic can make you not just see illusions, but also make you feel, taste and smell them.
Sky magic can also be used to enhance your senses. Seeing far, smelling gas or tasting poison may all be useful applications.
 
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