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For some reason, just because you wield magic (or Magick), even if you don't practice the dark arts, your life span is expanded. This can be reasonable if you practice healing magic (as you can heal your body's natural decay). And this is not lives relying on the suffering of others or the some other questionable method - it's just a simple equation. Got magic? Live longer.
Expect long lived wizards, especially of the Wizard Classic variety, to have particularly impressive Wizard Beards.
This is a Justified Trope in Taoism, since not practicing the dark arts would help one live longer. The energy from qi and the five elements is believed to be flowing through your body and supporting it. Practicing the dark arts would likely decay your body faster.
Subtrope of We Are as Mayflies, though it may not extend that far. Whether this is straight up immortality or merely a few tidy extra decades (or centuries), it certainly is a nice bonus — assuming you don't get killed in action.
Anime and Manga[]
- In the original version of Hunter X Hunter, one of the types of energy mentioned helps slow the aging process. Later, this is a joke, because one of the girls in a Hunter tower is assumed to be much older than she looks.
- When Joey duels Yugi in the Duelist Kingdom arc of Yu-Gi-Oh!, he uses his Time Wizard to make Yugi's Dark Magician 1000 years older. Not only does this fail to kill the Dark Magician, it ends up transforming him into the more powerful Dark Sage because the magician simply spent those thousand years studying and training.
- This mechanism is imitated in the card game, but it only works if the controller of the Dark Magician uses Time Wizard and only if they call the coin toss correctly.
- Implied in Slayers when Shabranigdu tells Lina "Those who employ sorcery sometimes live for centuries". There are definitely limits, though, as Xelloss later makes clear:
Xelloss: Rei Magnus was a sorcerer who lived five thousand years ago, you realize. |
- Mu, espers from Toward the Terra, not only live longer than normal humans, but also age slower. It’s implied that the more power they have, the longer they live. Blue, being one of the most powerful Mu, in age of 300 still looks like a young man, when his peers seem to be in their thirties or older.
Film[]
- Inverted in "The Covenant" where magic shortens your lifespan.
- It's shown a few times across Star Wars that a skilled enough Force user can use the Force to extend their lifespan beyond their species' natural limitations. Leia should have died in The Last Jedi but was able to use her Force abilities to keep herself going for another year. To say nothing of Emperor Palpatine's supreme skills in the Force allowing him to pull a full-on Body Surf to survive Return of the Jedi.
- King Magnifico from Wish is a Sorcerous Overlord who doesn't appear to have aged much over the course of a century. Contrast this to Sabino who very much has aged over the course of a century. Though Magnifico's Villain Song implies that his slow aging may have less to do with his magical talent and more the fact that he, and his seemingly non-magical wife, may not be human.
Literature[]
- Wizards in The Dresden Files can live for about three or four centuries. One book has Harry's go-to doctor realize, after observing his x-rays over a period of time (Harry gets injured a lot), that this is because their bodies' natural healing processes, for some reason or another, work a lot better than that of normal people, healing them until they are perfectly well, instead of until the injured part can work again, and the cell copies are perfect.
- The Old Ones in The Dark Is Rising - practically immortals.
- Eddings' Belgariad is similar; it's stated that sorcerers (and wolves, for no apparent reason) live as long as they "need to," although notably even after the plot has been completely resolved, they show no sign of starting to die off.
- Only wolves that are also sorcerers. It seems most wolves live regular wolf lives. It's never explained but I always assumed that, well, a sorcerer's power was just the manifestation of their will, and a strong will to live is innate in humans, so they don't die.
- From the same series, witches (who use magical powers based on manipulating nature spirits, as opposed to sorcerers, whose powers come from within themselves) live quite a bit longer than normals, though not nearly as long as sorcerers.
- Channelers in The Wheel of Time live for hundreds of years because use of magic causes "slowing" (slowed aging), with the effect supposedly larger in stronger channelers (the age cap for present Aes Sedai is about 300 years). In later books it is discovered that the Oath Rod actually drastically reduces one's lifespans; non-Aes Sedai channelers live much longer.
- Averted, however, for male channelers, who quickly degenerate mentally and physically due to the taint on the male half of the One Power. Rand, the Dragon Reborn, is in his early twenties, and most inborn channelers (that is, those whose power comes on unbidden rather than needing to be taught) are of a similar age or younger. Rand is very interested when he meets Mazrim Taim, who he guesses to be in his mid thirties and still not insane. Neither of those things might be correct however.
- Mages in the Heralds of Valdemar series, especially the Tayledras and others who work with node magic, tend to be preserved at late-middle age some years beyond the average lifespan. The flipside is that when they do reach the end of their life, they burn out and die in a matter of days or weeks.
- The Others (mages secretly living among humans) in Sergei Lukyanenko's Night Watch series stop aging soon after their Initiation, that is, consciously using magic for the first time.
- Children will still tend to age to maturity at a normal enough rate, but if you're old and not initiated until say 70, good luck with being 70 for a very long time. (Even though magic can make that be a very healthy 70...)
- Wizards and Sorceresses in The Witcher, which seems to go with the whole voluntary shape-shifting thing they have.
- In Robin McKinley's Sunshine, the titular character has always thought of this trope as wish fulfillment. She learns from a retired professional magic handler that while most ordinary magic handlers won't notice much difference, those who are powerful and steep themselves in magic can live to be very old indeed. This is not a cheerful thought, given that The End of the World as We Know It is predicted within the next century.
- In The Inheritance Cycle Dragon Riders live much longer than normal humans, and the witch Angela also mentions being "much older than she looks".
- Happens in Discworld. Barring fatal accidents(or less commonly "accidents"), most mages live well past their nineties, even despite their horrible Big Eater habits.
- Windle Poons died of old age at 130 years old and even spent a few days after that as a zombie.
- Unlike most examples here they age at the same rate as normal people, thus having the same amount of youth and a lot more of being very old. Poons had been infirm with age half his life.
- Windle Poons died of old age at 130 years old and even spent a few days after that as a zombie.
- Magical characters in Harry Potter seem to naturally have a longer lifespan than average. Dumbledore is the picture of good health despite being 110 during the events of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, and there are several living characters that are a generation older than him - Bathilda Bagshot and Griselda Marchbanks to name but two.
- Nicolas Flamel, the wizard responsible for creating the Philosopher's Stone itself, is said to be 664 in the first book - though this is explicitly due to the immortality serum the Philosopher's Stone generates.
- Hagrid is well into his 60s by the time the books take place, though doesn't look it. Having both wizard and giant ancestry gives him an extended lifespan even by ordinary wizard standards.
- Word of God says that wizards can live twice as long as Muggles, though apparently this isn't always the case - most of the Black family seem to have died long before their 100th birthday.
- Gellert Grindelwald managed to outlive Dumbledore by a year, before Tom "Uses Avada Kedavra on EVERYTHING" Riddle came calling. And this was while he was imprisoned in the top floor of the prison he had used to house his opponents. Admittedly, he would have been 60-something by the time he was thrown in there, but still.
- Armando Dippet, Dumbledore's predecessor, was in his 300s when he died, according to Word of God.
- Justified with the "wizards" in Lord of the Rings, who are explained to be divine beings on the level of low-ranking Biblical angels.
- Also justified with the nine sorcerer-kings who became the Nazgul, as the Rings which gave them their powers also anchored their souls to the mortal world. Unfotrunately for them, this had the ultimate side-effect of turning them into soulless undead horrors after a few centuries.
- Inverted in the Young Wizards series. Wizardry is a high-risk occupation, since being a wizard makes you a personal enemy of the Lone Power. And as you get better at magic, the riskier the jobs get, and all the while the Big Bad keeps getting more and more pissed off at you.
- Even averted for most of the exceptions to the above (magic users who join the Lone Power), as it invented death in the first place, jealously protects it, and makes sure anything a natural lifespan can be traded in for... is very ugly indeed. Although there have been hints that the few wizards the Lone Power merely likes (they oppose it, but make useful tools) do tend to live long and stress-free lives - because they never confront it when it wants to win.
- Inverted in CS Friedman's Magister Trilogy, where "ordinary" magic-users (witches) have drastically shortened life-spans because their magic slowly eats them up. Also played straight with the titular Magisters, who have learned how to latch on to the souls of others and use them as an alternate source of power, which has the side-effect of renering them functionally immortal.
- In the Dragonriders of Pern series, dragonriders can live well past 100 during an Interval (a minor character lived to 130 and was at most slowing down). During a Pass, however, the constant combat against Thread tends to give them shorter lifespans.
- The Thousanders in Anathem are implied to be able to hold their long lives steady via manipulating worldtracks despite living near piles of radioactive nuclear waste.
- Star Wars Legends states that Jedi tend to age slower than normal folk. Knights of the Old Republic lampshades it when someone remarks that the Exile doesn't look a day older than s/he did during the Mandalorian Wars a decade earlier. By contrast, most Sith seem to burn out faster, but are still able to extend their life past what it ought to be using the Dark Side, to the point where they're almost zombies. Freedon Naad and Darth Sion being great examples.
- The dark side version of this is displayed in Darth Xedrix, a respected Sith Lord likely well over a hundred years old. Though he tries to convince everyone that he is every bit as powerful as in his youth, when he is actually forced to fight he quickly reveals himself as a frail and powerless old man.
- Human ages in the SWEU vary Depending On the Author; in Timothy Zahn's works a governor can be forty and considered young, and sixty is middle aged, perhaps because they have better medical technology in the Galaxy Far Far Away. At least one later-set book states that Han should have until he's about a hundred twenty before his faculties start to fail, though other books regard human ages with more Earth-standard eyes. However, a Force-Sensitive woman in The Courtship of Princess Leia is stated to be three hundred years old. According to the wiki, Tales of the Jedi has an example of a Force-Sensitive human living to eight hundred.
- In German author Michael Peinkofer's Orks and Wizards series, mages are usually elves, but the only human mage also lives at least a thousand years without any explanation. On the other hand, his specialty is time magic, so maybe he's just lucky.
- Sufficiently powerful sorcerers in the Riftwar Cycle can live for several normal lifetimes; many evil ones use Black Magic on top of this to try for genuine immortality.
- Both the Elantrians and the Dakhor monks from Elantris have longer-than-natural lifespans, though how long precisely is never said.
- From the same author: the Steel Inquisitors in Mistborn are longer lived than normal humans, though other forms of magic user (including the eponymous mistborn) are not.
- In Warbreaker Awakeners have longer lives than normals and are resistant to disease. The most powerful are completely ageless and immune.
- The Fellowship of Seven in Janny Wurt's War Of Light And Shadow are over ten thousand years old. Their apprentices are also capable of avoiding aging, as are the Koriathain.
- The Koriathain process can only add up to 500 years to a person's lifespan and is only reserved for important members, which becomes convenient when one of them falls in love with the protagonist, who just happened to drink from a fountain that gives one an additional five hundred (strife-filled) years of life.
- Inverted by chaos mages in the Saga of Recluce- unless a mage is extremely careful with chaos energy, it will degrade their bodies faster than normal, leading them to age and die sooner than non-mages (unless they Body Surf out, as some eventually learn to do; their new bodies go even faster). Order mages, on the other hand, do tend to live longer. The few mages who understand both have a technique to stop aging entirely, so long as they don't screw around with pure chaos.
- Schmendrick in The Last Unicorn is temporarily immortal partially due to incompetence. His teacher decides there is no way he can reach his proper potential with a normal life span, since his talent for screwing up is even more powerful than his aptitude for magic. He's too potentially powerful to just let let him pass on unfulfilled, so he gives him immortality with a clause: if he ever figures out how to cast spells properly, he will be mortal again. Schmendrick wants to be a magician so bad, he regards his immortality as nothing more than proof of his failure.
- In Lynn Flewelling's Nightrunner series (and by extension the Tamir Triad which occurs in the same universe) wizards can potentially live up to 400 years old. Mainly due to the (human) wizards of this world being genetic throw-backs to inter-breeding with the Aurenfaie (Elves, essentially), from whom they inherit the long lifespan and magical abilities.
- Wild Wizards at least in David Weber's War God series. Wencit of Rum wasn't precisely young during the Fall of Kontovarr and is showing no signs of slowing down over a millenia later. The same 'magic field' that gives Wencit his power is also responsible for the Hradani living twice as long as humans and the immortality of the elves is explicitly linked to magic since they used to be a human strain of spellcasters with a specific natural gift rather than a learned ability.
- In Dragon Wing, the first book of The Death Gate Cycle, Hugh the Hand remarks to King Stephen's court wizard how young he looks. He responds "wars and kingship age a man; magic does not." Further reinforced by the Sartan and Patryns, both Witch Species who can live for centuries.
- Seems to be the case in Rivers of London, with last english wizard being hundred years old.
Live-Action TV[]
- Witches in Sabrina the Teenage Witch have a lifespan than can last centuries. Sabrina's aunts have been around since the late Dark Ages/early Renaissance and later note to their niece that witches live for so long that they go through multiple wills (mainly so they can declutter their coffers every few centuries).
Tabletop Games[]
- In Warhammer 40000 psykers can live much longer lives than normal humans due to the power of the Warp, keeping them young and healthy for hundreds of years, or they can burn out a few hours after their powers have been awakened and become ashes, or mutate into a horrible creature, or live a long time but steadily become older until they look like mummies without the wrappings, or explode and usher in the doom of the planet as The Legions of Hell begin to march on it, or just live a normal lifespan with the added ability to set people on fire. It varies as the power of sheer unreality tends to do.
- In general, it seems to be a rule that races with psychic ability live longer. The Tau have almost no warp presence, and live 40 years. Humans have some warp presence, varying from person to person, and live hundreds. Eldar, the standard psychic powers race, can live to be over 1,000 (with specialized fortune-tellers living far longer, one even managing to stay alive for over 10,000 years). The two races most connected to the warp, the Orks and Chaos proper, are both effectively immortal, though still capable of being killed by injury.
- And much of the expanded lifespan is because of expensive rejuvenating technologies that can be used by non-psykers too.
- Technologies rumoured to be fuelled with the lives of children, mind.
- All three of the "core" openly magical Arcane Backgrounds in Deadlands have some way to reduce the effects of aging. Hucksters get a year of their life added in the here-and-now (unless they suffer a Critical Failure) while the Blessed and Shamans have ways to greatly reduce the rate at which they age.
- Mad Scientists, on the other hand, lack a method to slow aging, but can opt to go transhuman instead, like Darius Helstromme did. In the nineteenth century, "transhuman" equals "reanimated zombie brain in a jar in a clanky steam robot body".
- The mages of Mage: The Awakening tend to be able to live to a decent age, but especially those with sufficient Life magic. Fairly basic knowledge of Life lets one hold off injury and disease, purge toxic substances from their bodies, and enhance their bodily functions (such as metabolism and heartrate). More advanced Life magics can have a side-effect of increasing the mage's lifespan by somewhere between 30 and 130 years. The most powerful magics can let them slow down or stop the aging process (albeit with a spell with very short duration).
- The changelings of Changeling: The Lost, also from the New World of Darkness, get longer lives the higher their Wyrd rises. Of course, as with all "supernatural power level" stats in the game, there are disadvantages associated with having a high Wyrd... Some of which are quite, quite horrible.
- In the Old World of Darkness game Mage: The Ascension, Life magic works much as in the newer game. There is also an option to select "Unaging" as a merit when creating a Mage, which gives eternal youth. This merit is quite inexpensive, because very few mages live to die of old age anyway.
- Exalted live much longer than mortal humans do, assuming nothing manages to kill them. On top of that, most kinds (except Sidereals, who have a preset death date due to the way their Exaltations work) can extend their lifespan even further through various kinds of magic.
- Solars and Lunars - apparently average around 2,000-3,000 years, though use of various Charms and treatments can push it much higher; Solars can theoretically hit 10,000 years.
- Sidereals - depends on when their Exaltation is due to move to a new host, but generally at least 3,000 years. One has been known to last 5,000.
- Terrestrials - 200-500 years, those with good Breeding tend to live longer than those without.
- Abyssals and Alchemicals - functionally immortal, as they are essentially Undead and Golems, respectively.
- Infernals - depends on Essence, going from 150 years at lowest to 2500+ years at highest. However, they can gain apotheosis - and immortality - before age becomes an issue.
- The immortal elves in Shadowrun are all stupendously powerful magicians, but the causality goes the other way around: they're that good because they've had thousands of years of practice, and because they know techniques from the previous magical age that everyone else hasn't (re)discovered yet.
- Planeswalkers in Magic the Gathering used to be able to live indefinitely, and post-nerfing they still live for a very long time. Even wizards who aren't planeswalkers can extend their lifespans by drinking water from an area where time passes more slowly.
Video Games[]
- Aeons from Dew Prism could live much longer than a regular muggle and wizard, due to their magical artifacts known as [relics] but, even though most lived for over 1000 years (an example is Fancy Mel), they were not immortal, so they tried to evade death as much as possible. Also, one of Valen's apprentices, was skilled enough to imitate a Valen Doll to perfection, however he had a soap opera disease, and even though he was taught by the in-game greatest sorcerer of the world, he still died prematurely.
- Magic-users in Warcraft have an expanded lifespan (the most powerful like archmages or the Guardian of Tirisfal in particular can live for several centuries). However it's also mentioned that using magic also makes you age faster, even if your lifespan is increased.
- Then again, Aegwynn (Medivh's mother) was still fertile after a thousand years. This troper is fairly sure that her use of magic didn't do much to age her...
- Aegwynn used a specific anti aging spell to preserve not just her life, but her looks for hundreds of years. This was mentioned as being risky as it could possibly fail at any time. Eventually she sacrificed this spell to escape Medivh, and after the First War actually did look her age. For some reason, she was still as physically fit as a healthy woman at the younger side of middle aged.
- After Medivh was resurrected (thanks to Aegwynn's remaining power) without Sargeras in him, he used his Guardian powers to help his mother. This is mentioned in The Cycle of Hatred novel, when Jaina Proudmoore finds her childhood hero still alive and living in Kalimdor. Aegwynn eventually becomes her advisor.
- Then again, Aegwynn (Medivh's mother) was still fertile after a thousand years. This troper is fairly sure that her use of magic didn't do much to age her...
- Wizards in the Zork series display this thanks to the unashamedly named Long Life Spell. Semi-subverted in Zork: Grand Inquisitor where a wizard becomes suicidal but is unable to die because of casting this spell on himself.
- In Fire Emblem 7 the only 2 heroes from the Scouring that are left alive are the spell casters.
- Just to clarify, the Scouring was an ancient war between humans and dragons occurred about 980 years before the events of Fire Emblem 7 (1000 years before the 6th game).
- Archmages in Bungie's Myth series of Real Time Tactical games are known to live for very long times. Alric, a heroic archmage from the first game, was still alive and healthy enough to stride the battlefield in armor during the second game that takes place sixty years later. Even more than this, the Fallen Lords of the title, are even older, having been heroes from a millenia ago that have undergone an inverse Heel Face Turn due to a cosmic system of cyclic fate (though they may be reincarnations rather than long-lived individuals.) Bungie has stated in interviews that some of the most powerful wizards in the Myth universe simply cannot be Killed Off for Real, as one could chop them up, burn their bodies, mix the ashes with salt, and drag them to the four corners of the world, but if someone put them all back together again they would simply reanimate. Indeed, after beheading the Big Bad in the second-to-last mission in Myth: The Fallen Lords, you must then use the next mission to carry his head (still alive and taunting you) to a Bottomless Pit and thow it in, thus preventing its retreval and restoration.
- Played straight in Arcanum, where elves, the most magically inclined race, have the longest lifespans, and humans who practise magic tend to live slightly longer than technologists. Elves who actively practice magic live even longer and can apparently watch an entire millennium pass by. Also subverted, since orcs and halflings, who were created by magical mutation, have shorter lifespans than their non-magical cousins, the humans and gnomes respectively.
- Divayth Fyr is an example of this in Morrowind, where, due to being a sorcerer, he has lived to 4000 years of age.
- It is heavily implied (by means of explicitly stating it for several of his fellow Telvanni lords) that he has been actively using magic to live that long. Still, the implication picked up over the series is that mages do live longer than their less magically talented compatriots even without that — just on the order of decades rather than millenia.
- Implied in Skyrim. The headmaster of the Mages College in Winterhold promises that the lessons you learn at the college will last a lifetime... or possibly several, if you prove particularly talented.
- Usually the case in Dominions, where most mages start out older than usual and plenty live longer or never die. An exception are fire mages, who lose maximum age with more power.
Web Comics[]
- In Code Name: Hunter, in Astoria, Mages can live up to two hundred, peasants, thirty. Gadel is surprised it's different elsewhere.
Web Original[]
- Zig Zagged in Suburban Knights. It turns out that magic is actually Cast From Lifespan, so using magic will actually shorten your life. However, we then learn that Malachite has lived for millennia because he has magic, but simply hasn't used it for a long time. So it extends your life, but only shortens it if you use it to excess. He's after the Hand of Malachite because it contains a gem that will allow him to use magic without the costs, and extend his lifetime indefinitely because of it.
Western Animation[]
- Avatar: The Last Airbender: Benders and the spiritually connected seem to have better than normal life spans (Bumi is over 112 and still active, and Guru Pathik is 150 and still active), and Avatars seem to live even longer than them.
- Avatar Kyoshi, most Badass Avatar ever, lived for 230 years, the longest of any Avatar, and presumably retained all her faculties until the very end. (And no, this was not merely a Hand Wave on the writer's part so that they didn't have to invent four more Avatars to go between Roku and Kyoshi.)
- Aang himself is chronologically 112 years old, due directly to his Avatar abilities. Physically and mentally he's still twelve. Word of God states that Aang's time frozen in the iceberg burnt out much of the extra time being an Avatar would have granted him. He died at the age of 66, relatively young for an Avatar, and because of this only about 70 years have passed since the end of the last series before Korra takes over.
- Merklynn from Visionaries. He was a prominent figure during the first Age of Magic...which was over a thousand years ago as the series begins.
- Leonard Powers of Ugly Americans is over 400 years old, and looks every decade of it. His "apprentice" is 50 and appears to be a young teenager.
- Bezel from Ben 10: Omniverse has lived for centuries.