Lhynn wrote: ↑
February 22nd, 2026, 02:29
Valter wrote: ↑
February 22nd, 2026, 02:17
Lhynn wrote: ↑
February 22nd, 2026, 01:57
Invisibility is a 2nd level spell. That said, generally speaking mages forego those kinds of spells because they eat up slots and are not as powerful as other forms of damage mitigation.
Mages get spells that make them tankier than fighters, often also allowing them to damage whomever attacks them, hiding seems kinda ******** at that point.
Tank mages are not common either. Oh and I don't know about DnD rules I'm just talking video game RPGs in general. You get your mage party member it's either a DPS, a debuffer or a healer, or a mix of either of these. Very formulaic.
This isnt true, in almost every rpg the mage will have a tanking option and it will be absolutely viable all the way to endgame. Its actually hard to think of a game where mages dont have the option to be tanks.
I am most familiar with RPG fantasy mages from Elder Scrolls, Dragon Age, Fire Emblem, several 2010s MMORPGs... Also remember a game I played a lot where you'd pick between a two-handed staff or a wand + spellbook. Can't remember the name of it tho
Of all of these, only on Elder Scrolls I can remember having a damage reduction spell or something alike so you are not wrong, but it did not seem anywhere near as optimal as just strapping on 30kg of armor. And on the stealth mage matter, it does allow you to cast stuff while hidden, but I really hated that daggers got a 3x increase on stealth or whatever stupid **** that was. Well why shouldn't my rock spike not deal 50x damage? It's 50x heavier than a dagger!

The discrimination is endless!
I also played the Pathfinder video games and it is true that you have many more options there, but I do not recall any of the spellcasting companions you get being specialized in any form of tankiness when you get them. I actually think one of them was an Arcane Trickster or something alike as
@UltraFan123 mentioned, so kudos for that game.
Also the core question here, regardless if we're speaking of tank or stealth mages, is not whether they exist, but rather "why are they not more common?". Of course these archetypes exist, fiction is very creative, but go search for images of a Mage or a Sorcerer and it's all very similar.