When orks go Waaagh things get messy.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.Anyway, I often follow the thought-cycle of 'technological superiority trumps magic'
-Arthur C. Clarke
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.Anyway, I often follow the thought-cycle of 'technological superiority trumps magic'
Yellow 13 wrote: *brofist*
You still need to cast spells.Oddball wrote:Magic beats technology because it cheats. It doesn't have to make any kind of sense.
No you don't have to cast spells to use. Magic is simply a generic term for strange feats that are not achieve by science. In my universe for my stories, instead of chanting spells, magic is triggered by willpower (there are lots of rules to prevent this becoming story-breaking, everyone has limits to what they can do and they need lots of training to do so.). In my stories, every human is half-daemonic as well, so bullets don't work as well. Magic on the other hand, espcially in the hands of a daemon, will probably one-shot a human. In this case, magic beats technology (as people still use modern day-weaponry mixed with medivial. It an odd setting.). So, in some settings, magic can defeat technology, but this can be true in reverse as well. I would have to judge on a case-by-case basic.Megumeru wrote:You still need to cast spells.Oddball wrote:Magic beats technology because it cheats. It doesn't have to make any kind of sense.
And before that happen, a bullet can travel faster than words
Magnetic PenisMegumeru wrote: No you don't have to cast spells to use. Magic is simply a generic term for strange feats that are not achieve by science. In my universe for my stories, instead of chanting spells, magic is triggered by willpower (there are lots of rules to prevent this becoming story-breaking, everyone has limits to what they can do and they need lots of training to do so.). In my stories, every human is half-daemonic as well, so bullets don't work as well. Magic on the other hand, espcially in the hands of a daemon, will probably one-shot a human. In this case, magic beats technology (as people still use modern day-weaponry mixed with medivial. It an odd setting.). So, in some settings, magic can defeat technology, but this can be true in reverse as well. I would have to judge on a case-by-case basic.
Also, how off-topic can we get? LET US FIND OUT!
Unless of course there's only a certain class of people that CAN learn magic.OK OK serious; The logical endpoint of any magical universe is that the magic will eventually function similarly to technology. Enough wizards will look into it and enough minions and test subjects will die, and the rules of the magic will be codified and eventually applied in such a way so as to eliminate the need for a wizardly class of people.
My point is that whatever restricts magic to a select few would eventually be uncovered and workarounds would be applied, because people like to have computers/magic orbs that they can carry in their pockets.Oddball wrote: Unless of course there's only a certain class of people that CAN learn magic.
True dat. Don't they have some kind of latent psychic powers that makes their rattletrap tech actually work?Newbonomicon wrote:But all of this technology versus magic talk is a moot point when discussing Orks VS. Tanks, because the letter K indicates that these are the ones from Warhammer 40k.
Kalashnikovs that are loaded with Avada Kedavra bullets trump both.Yellow 13 wrote:Avtomat Kalashnikova>Avada Kedavra
nuff' said
Aww... I was looking forward to a nice heart to heart between the two.As for Hanako and Deadpool...Deadpool is being played as his over the top insane violent-loving self, so Hanako wouldn't last very long IMHO.