Power At a Price: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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** [[Mighty Glacier]]—Power without speed.
** [[Mighty Glacier]]—Power without speed.
** [[Stone Wall]]—Defense without offense.
** [[Stone Wall]]—Defense without offense.
** [[Powerful, but Inaccurate]]--Power without accuracy.
* [[Level Scaling]]—Power that comes at a price of increased difficulty.
* [[Level Scaling]]—Power that comes at a price of increased difficulty.
** [[Empty Levels]]—When the power actually makes your character weaker or increases the difficulty disproportionately.
** [[Empty Levels]]—When the power actually makes your character weaker or increases the difficulty disproportionately.

Revision as of 01:18, 11 May 2019

You mean magic isn't for free?
"All power demands sacrifice"
Sindri, Dawn of War

Power. The ability to influence, create, change, and even destroy. Things, places, people. It is by nature highly contentious: Some want it and would kill for it, others do not want it, or would gladly give away such a burden. Therein lies the rub. For all its force, blessings, or ability to change, power is not free... of responsibility, consequence, or cost. Some people think the exchange has to be "fair."

Drama derives vigor from the quandary of how power, seemingly free of any strings, has inherent costs. Whether they are hideous mutations, social alienation, or even death varies by story, genre, and kind of power. But the underlying basis is the same: Power at a Price.

Examples of Power At a Price include:


Artifacts

Magic

Martial

Political

  • Ambition Is Evil—Trying to climb the social ladder tends to knock everyone else down a rung; therefore, it is evil and shouldn't be done.
  • Lonely at the Top—The more powerful you are, the more isolated and lonelier you'll be.
  • Pride

Psychic Powers

Super Powers

Scientific

Video Games and Tabletop Games