Magic involves using various storytelling aspects to make a whimsical reaction from the audience.
Not exact matches
Top with a recipe I found in Keto Clarity for chocolate
magic shell topping,
involving unsweetened chocolate, coconut oil, and water (I
used heavy cream) melted in the microwave and then poured on top.
By taking it to a shop, they will
use whatever
magic is
involved and get it straight... and it'll stay that way.
To the untrained eye, the strain of
magic involving animal spirits and the
use of charms and powders in Cynthia Bond's novel might seem to be a branch of voodoo - a belief system that finds its origins in the Western African religion of Vodun.
I thought it would
involve more time on Earth, where I was very curious to see how the Prometheans
used magic and how the world of Faerie interacted with Man.
i knew my husband and i also know that some thing else was
involve on this when i found out that this woman
use a
magic spell on my husband just to take him away from me, i was so devastating this as a result also destroyed my heart and soul coz i love my husband and i really want to get back with him i have seek for different counselling, nor could work out for me so i started given up on my husband coz there was no hope on getting back with him.
Using magic during combat also feels lackluster: unleashing an icy bolt to freeze enemies doesn't feel like you're doing much more than throwing an ice - cube at someone who mildly annoyed you, while setting foes alight with your Nova attack
involves you creating what looks like a pile of gellatine at your feet before unleashing the attack which doesn't so much set fire to enemies as generate some weird particle effects.
There really is nothing too
involved about
using magic or switching weapons, but in a game as unforgiving as this, you have to make the controls second nature.
My theory is that cameo should have
involved some of the elements from Starfox: DP where kameo would do most of her combat with a weapon, like a staff that could be
used to hit or shoot
magic balls or something.
Examples of this system
involve using magic to send the enemy flying back and then switching quickly to another character to come in for an attack.
More recent pieces have
involved dance, notably her series Scrying — a
magic term for
using some sort of medium for psychic divination — which consisted of ballet performances at MoMA, where the dancers engaged in a mirror - based production in the museum's towering atrium, and other sites.
«
Magic with numbers» is always accomplished by either inventing your data or massaging what data you have, unreliable at best given the time spans
involved the equipment available, the precision, repeatable accuracy and calibration of the equipment
used to collect the data along with the number of people doing the measurements, all of which are accomplished somewhat differently.
Nothing here that would be of any interest to folks like Tamino, Nick Barnes, etc., but hopefully can be
used to convince skeptical «average joes» that there's really no black
magic involved in computing global temperature anomalies.
Other design faux pas have
involved functionality, like putting a Lightning charging port face - down on the bottom of the
Magic Mouse so that it's impossible to
use while it is charging.