When writing speculative fiction, one of the writerās most important jobs is to establish the new rules for their world. In many branches of speculative fiction, especially fantasy and even horror, this is magic, though it can also be technology and alternate scientific rules for science fiction. Whatever alternate fact(s) or reality you utilize to make your fictional world possible, that qualifies as a āmagic system.ā Your magic system is most often defined by what it canāt do rather than by what it can.
Why do I need a magic system?
When writing speculative fiction, itās usually assumed that something about your world is different than ours. That can be a small tweak or it can be a complete dismantle-and-reassembly of physics as we understand it. Whatever system you choose to implement, it needs to have internally consistent rules. If, throughout the course of your book, magics begin to contradict each other, then it will disturb your readers suspension of disbelief. You donāt want your awesome magic to yank your readers from the believability of the story. Butā¦most important of allā¦you have to establish some sort of rules and limits in order to prevent yourself from pulling a deus ex machina. No one likes a poorly executed deus ex machina. Few people like a well executed one (is there such a thing?). If you have rules, limits, cost, built into the magic or technology of your world, then you establish something that is not only nuanced and interesting, but believable.
Butā¦butā¦itās magic!!!
Why write speculative fiction if I have to create and follow all of these tedious rules?! The real world has rules enough.
Itās true. But following your own rules and following real worlds arenāt the same thing. Lots of you have probably heard the little saying, āGive your world a Flux Capacitor.ā If you think about it, Back to the Futureās Flux Capacitor doesnāt make a lot of sense. Itās not explained. But we accept it because itās magic. And when Doc says, āHereās this thing. It makes time travel possible.ā We accept it because itās a simple alteration. He doesnāt try to use it to do more than what is initially established. It never breaks that rule. Itās not used to get Marty out of an impossible situation, defying any previous understanding of the technology. Thatās why it works.
First, you need to probably choose what type of magic you will use. Will be elements based? Or energy based? Spirit? Physical? Time and Space? What things is your magic summoning/manipulating/drawing from?
Now youāll want to focus on the parts that make your magic yours. Sure, elemental magic has been used half a zillion times, but it can still be interesting if you do something new with it. The best way to do something new is to alter its limits, change the cost, give it a new spin that makes your regular olā fire magic something intriguing.
You can do a little bit of research into ancient forms of magic, into other literary uses of magic. See what those before you have done and use it as an inspiration.
If youāre having trouble knowing where to start, Iām here to provide you some thoughts concerning the skeletal-assembly of your magic system! Use these prompts as you see fit!
What does magic use/alter/manipulate?
water, only, in all of its forms
items of specific color or texture
anyone whoās ever petted a dog
intense study and training
From where is power drawn?
physical contact with _____ (the earth, another life force, a drawing or rune)
kinetic or potential energy
movement of tectonic plates
spiritual energy of those nearby
consumption of specific foods/drinks/elements
Coming soon: Brainstorming Magic Systems, Part 2!