Well it was just such an attempt and look a year or so later we were blessed with the MMO neverwinter. so its not so much a lazy and meaningless insult as a prediction a lot of people made the came true.
Plenty of other games have video game versions too, you know. Shadowrun, Vampire, D&D3, Magic, chess, solitaire...it doesn't say anything meaningful about the game itself.
I understand they shouldn't be more powerful for game balance but I have never been able to get around the simple fact, that if magic were indeed real they/it would always overshadow everything else.
What?
How the hell do you know what magic would be like if it were real?
There's really no way to guess something like that. You could go by what people actually believe magic can do, but...real magic would be kind of lame even if it actually worked.
So when I run my games I run with wizards and magic being the pinnacle of the game. I want my players to play wizards. If you want to play say a police girl with a gun and the ability to throw big men down that's fine, but the foes we will be playing against wont be big men that you can just throw down.
Then give the wizards more skill points and extra Refresh.
Skills and Refresh are the measure of power in this game. Two characters who are equal in those traits will be equal power-wise, if everything works as planned.
The Dresden files are about a wizard who has a bunch of hangers on that help him, but when the story is done it was the wizard who did the heavy lifting.
Harry's the main character, but he's nowhere near the strongest character. He's just in the right place at the right time.
In particular, I'd like to note that the Knights of the Cross make him look pretty weak until he departs from the Wizard Template. And even after that, they do some stuff he simply can't match.
I have never understood why anyone would think that a man with a piece of metal with a pointy end could ever stand up to a man who controls the fundamental forces of the universe. It's not realistic fantasy.
Realistic fantasy? What does that even mean?
Magic has no realistic power level. A magic system can top out at bending spoons, or it can give its weakest users the ability to destroy galaxies. Both are equally plausible.
If you want to make a game about how wizards are better than everyone else, play a high-powered game where all of the PCs cast spells.