- 15,441
- 5,031
Easily a serious and important matter to touch.
You may have seen it many times before, a character/power souce creates or destroys some place (a world, dimension with a starry sky, universe, etc.) in a dream, or a painting, or book, mirrors, someone's mind, etc. Or maybe speed feats are done there, or other types of feats, and then people here claim those feats to be applicable to what can happen in the real universe of the verse.
Why would those feats in places that aren't real matter at all? Different users with different levels of experience have different replies and reasons to give, but what makes everything legit to them may not be the same to make those feats legit to you, or for the nearest person you have to buy what we decide on doing as logical.
Much like how our Universe page gives standards on when a dimension can be said to be a universe, and how our Creation page says when Creation can scale to AP, our Immersion page should point out when some non-real, fictional place counts as having a genuine scaling creation or destruction of it scalable to reality.
I for instance don't believe how we accepted painting worlds not considered part of the real world/reality in Super Mario 64 to be real feats with dimensions with starry skies being created, or how the Wind Fish in Zelda created a universe in his dream. Those franchises nor any other franchise doesn't matter for this thread, only the reasons as to why those feats were accepted for them and what reasons can we as a wiki take as valid.
We have things like how:
Now, if it's stated that a fictional place "is just as real" as reality/whatever then sure, that's something. For example the Soul Stone in Marvel has a multiverse in it that once had a real character in it asking something like "So this is one of those 'Die in the dream, you die in the real world'-type of situations?", and that made me think that the universes it has inside don't matter, but then this was also stated, saying that those universes are "as real and important" as real universes. What would be the point of stating that if they didn't know that some dream-like place isn't notable? Or if some universes inside a tiny stone weren't notable?
Let's see what we agree on.
You may have seen it many times before, a character/power souce creates or destroys some place (a world, dimension with a starry sky, universe, etc.) in a dream, or a painting, or book, mirrors, someone's mind, etc. Or maybe speed feats are done there, or other types of feats, and then people here claim those feats to be applicable to what can happen in the real universe of the verse.
Why would those feats in places that aren't real matter at all? Different users with different levels of experience have different replies and reasons to give, but what makes everything legit to them may not be the same to make those feats legit to you, or for the nearest person you have to buy what we decide on doing as logical.
Much like how our Universe page gives standards on when a dimension can be said to be a universe, and how our Creation page says when Creation can scale to AP, our Immersion page should point out when some non-real, fictional place counts as having a genuine scaling creation or destruction of it scalable to reality.
I for instance don't believe how we accepted painting worlds not considered part of the real world/reality in Super Mario 64 to be real feats with dimensions with starry skies being created, or how the Wind Fish in Zelda created a universe in his dream. Those franchises nor any other franchise doesn't matter for this thread, only the reasons as to why those feats were accepted for them and what reasons can we as a wiki take as valid.
We have things like how:
- Real people/things could travel into those fictional places.
- They could get killed, or simply modified a bit in those fictional places.
- People/things in those fictional places have their own lives and things going on when no one is watching.
- People/things in those fictional places can be moved into reality.
- People/things in those fictional places may have a history from before they were created.
Now, if it's stated that a fictional place "is just as real" as reality/whatever then sure, that's something. For example the Soul Stone in Marvel has a multiverse in it that once had a real character in it asking something like "So this is one of those 'Die in the dream, you die in the real world'-type of situations?", and that made me think that the universes it has inside don't matter, but then this was also stated, saying that those universes are "as real and important" as real universes. What would be the point of stating that if they didn't know that some dream-like place isn't notable? Or if some universes inside a tiny stone weren't notable?
Let's see what we agree on.