Because magic isn't all-powerful as you seem to think it is. Redguards are awesome enough without eastern magic. According to lore, the Redguards are so skilled they blew up a continent using a sword technique. We have yet to see a Mage replicate a similarly awesome act with Eastern Magic. Magic isn't necessary if a race is inherently bad-ass enough. Redguards are Stronger, Faster, More Agile, and Tougher than the average Nedic man. Does that answer your question?
Why use spell when you can do more with sword? And you just contradicted yoursefl, sort of. Magic is widely available, like college. Most people can't afford it, but again, a 33% of a population being magic users is still an extreme minority. And the discussed numbers are 10-25%, which is still one out of every ten soldiers. So, in a group of 1,000 warriors, 100 are potentially dedicated battlemages, and an additional 150 assorted warriors augmented with spellcasting.
Why use spell when you can do more with sword? And you just contradicted yoursefl, sort of. Magic is widely available, like college. Most people can't afford it, but again, a 33% of a population being magic users is still an extreme minority. And the discussed numbers are 10-25%, which is still one out of every ten soldiers. So, in a group of 1,000 warriors, 100 are potentially dedicated battlemages, and an additional 150 assorted warriors augmented with spellcasting.
Scow2 I think you are basing this too much off of game mechanics. 33 percent of the population being mages is highly improbable if we look at it through the spectrum of realistic possibilities. And now you may say "but we're in a fantasy world" right but that fantasy world still works based off of economics and the social structure of the medieval world. Let's look at some logical aspects.
What do you think the literacy rate in the medieval era was and to the same extent in Tamriel? Maybe 1 percent of the population? Maybe 2 percent? And out of that you can already tell that the number of actual magic practitioners in total is very few. Because if you hope to be educated in magic, you better know how to read. Magic would be almost exclusively available to the rich, military, and the extremely talented which would be able to find a patron. Even then many of those people who had the money but not the talent would be able to cast a few minor spells before being rendered as nothing more than a book worm in a robe. Consider the fact that someone trained in the arcane for one year will be a lot less effective than someone trained with a sword in a year. I would say that per province in Tamriel the number of actually very capable mages could be counted on one, maybe two hands with the rest being capable at a handful of spells or extremely specialized. But this 33 percent business is highly improbable.