This ability is at least as dangerous as the killing curse, if not more so. People are objects. Harry can now transfigure, say, a chunk of someone else’s brain into steel, or glass, or water. Turning someone else into a ferret is scary, yes, but they’ll turn back little the worse for wear.
This makes Harry very, very dangerous, especially because he hasn’t realized it yet.
I always thought the killing curse was overrated. Many of the spells that first years use in pranks on each other will get you a kill if you are carrying a knife in your pocket.
In 1 vs 1 combat stupefy beats avada kedavra. By about 3 syllables.
Don’t forget that Avada Kedavra has the advantage that it can’t be blocked/mitigated/etc, whereas spells like stupefy presumably can (or that advantage of AK wouldn’t be worth noting).
More specifically, most spells can be blocked by the “protego” charm. AK cannot be blocked in this matter although AK can be dodged or can have a large physical object block it.
Presumably that at least allows him to break through any locks. Mastering this wandlessly will make it impossible to effectively restrain him while leaving conscious. The choice to make it possible is still on the author, because the Magic could make it impossible regardless, as it holds lots of conceptual knowledge already and can impose map distinctions of its own, however the wizard conceptualizes the situation.
Really? Because he can transfigure parts of objects? I took that as the rest of the wizarding world being incompetent.
This ability is at least as dangerous as the killing curse, if not more so. People are objects. Harry can now transfigure, say, a chunk of someone else’s brain into steel, or glass, or water. Turning someone else into a ferret is scary, yes, but they’ll turn back little the worse for wear.
This makes Harry very, very dangerous, especially because he hasn’t realized it yet.
I always thought the killing curse was overrated. Many of the spells that first years use in pranks on each other will get you a kill if you are carrying a knife in your pocket.
In 1 vs 1 combat stupefy beats avada kedavra. By about 3 syllables.
Don’t forget that Avada Kedavra has the advantage that it can’t be blocked/mitigated/etc, whereas spells like stupefy presumably can (or that advantage of AK wouldn’t be worth noting).
More specifically, most spells can be blocked by the “protego” charm. AK cannot be blocked in this matter although AK can be dodged or can have a large physical object block it.
It was already described in detail, when Transfiguration was introduced, that transfiguring a living thing kills it...
Transfiguring a whole person is very difficult though.
But does transfiguring a piece of a living thing kill it? I’m curious to see how that will work out.
Presumably that at least allows him to break through any locks. Mastering this wandlessly will make it impossible to effectively restrain him while leaving conscious. The choice to make it possible is still on the author, because the Magic could make it impossible regardless, as it holds lots of conceptual knowledge already and can impose map distinctions of its own, however the wizard conceptualizes the situation.
Unless the restraints are protected against transfiguration.
If the ability to transform just portions of objects is completely novel, those protections might or might not extend to it.
In other words: rejoice, Eliezer! Whichever you choose will be plausible! (As long as you remember to be consistent)
If you can prevent apparition by powerful wizards you can quite likely prevent transfiguration via a similar mechanism.