![]() ![]() Single wizards can teleport into a castle. The possibilities are endless, and could drive you crazy.įortunately orcs & such are notorious light in the magical artillery catagory, so historical fortifications are probably more than adequate against the "usual" suspects a local ruler would be worried about.Įxtempus wrote:But not everything can do those amazing things. Or an attacking force could create a fortified beach-head inside an enemy fortification. Of course, with wall & barrier spells, a defending force can refortify on the fly, split and channel attacking forces, etc. A single invisible mage teleporting inside a fortification and casting every monster summoning spell she could memorize is a one woman version of the fall of Troy, for example unless the defending wizards start whipping up defenders of their own. In a magic heavy campaign, fortifications either need to be "anti-magic'ed" or a seige/frontal assault comes down to who can chuck the most spells. Dig comes to mind as another way to undercut foundations, assuming you don't just tunnel under the fortification. move earth, or stone shape) but could still have impressive effects in breaking a seige. Some spells are slower acting, or affect a smaller volume (e.g. Letting a few earth elementals loose would also have some devestating effects on a fortification, depending how the DM plays them and the powers of elementals and their kin. I would suspect that even gunpowder era fortifications (and I know very, very little about the evolution of fortifications, so I'm just SWAGing here) would be inadequate when dealing with a hostile force that could teleport, use passwall, and other transportation magics to effectively neutralize set fortifications. The interesting thing is you don't need to change technology level at all to change fortress design, as gunpowder era forts need no more complex tech, just a different layout and strategic planning.įor example: the fortification of Geneva in 1841 as an example of what a fantasy city might look like Giants, Wizards, and the like are effectively artillery, and the need to defend against them could drastically change how things developed. I could imaging fortification may actually resemble gunpowder era fortification and not medieval style. More internal balista near center of fort to ward off air-strikes ![]()
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