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Azurea_Mystis
Azurea_Mystis
We convert the dark matter in space into ether and then separate the constituent particles of the ether into their basemost forms. Then we put them together to make protons, neutrons, and electrons. Then we assemble these into 2 hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Then these are combined to make water. Then we do it 479 billion more times to shoot a water ball, which will have rotational and directional force applied to it.
Azurea_Mystis
Azurea_Mystis
Also, usually, the nearest source of water for a magician is actually their own body, which is why certain magic circles for such a low level spell as water bolt are still massive. If you don't put safeguards into a spell circle that draws from nearby sources, then you could accidentally end up as a husk or completely gone.
UnnamedPlayer
UnnamedPlayer
Your comment make me search for numbers to check it, and also to kill every America allergic to metric units in this forum. Result : there is a few grams of water vapor in 1 m^3 of air, and it vary with temperature (between 9g at 10°c and 30g at 30°c). So a good mage can fill a bottle in a few seconds at best. Water magic is therefore usefull if you're near a lake or river, but nothing else. I'll take earth magic, thanks.
solstice258
solstice258
If the wizard can turn vapor into liquid, then they should be able to turn it into ice too.
I think attacking with sharp ice crystals like bullets is *ahem* cool.
Angry_Panda
Angry_Panda
Result : there is a few grams of water vapor in 1 m^3 of air, and it vary with temperature (between 9g at 10°c and 30g at 30°c).
Translating from fictional to real units: there is up to an ounce of water in every cubic yard of air, ranging from around a third of an ounce at 50F to a bit over an ounce at 86F. [Note - this assumes 100% humidity.]

:smug:
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