Do what you want, But tier 0 is pretty strict. If you are intrested in writing a good tier 0 I would suggest reading all that you can.
So i used deepseek and this is what it told me-
Here's a simplified summary of the text:
###
Omnipotence Explained Simply
Omnipotence means having unlimited power—the ability to do anything. It’s often paired with
Omnipresence (being everywhere) and
Omniscience (knowing everything).
###
Key Questions & Paradoxes
-
Can an omnipotent being create a stone so heavy it can’t lift it?
- This is a classic paradox. If it can create such a stone, then it’s not all-powerful (since it can’t lift it). If it can’t create the stone, it’s also not all-powerful.
- Most philosophers argue that
logical contradictions (like a square circle) aren’t real tasks, so failing to do them doesn’t limit true omnipotence.
###
Two Views on Omnipotence
1.
Logical Omnipotence (Most Common View)
- An omnipotent being can do anything that’s logically possible but can’t perform nonsense (like making 2+2=5).
-
Example: C.S. Lewis argued that God can’t do the impossible because nonsense isn’t a real thing to "do."
2.
Absolute Omnipotence (Descartes’ View)
- Some, like Descartes, believed God
could break logic—making contradictions true if He wanted.
- This is a rare and controversial stance because it makes reality unstable.
###
Beyond Power: The "Ground of Being"
Some philosophies (like Neoplatonism, Hinduism, and certain Christian theologies) see the ultimate power not as a "super-being" but as
the fundamental reality behind everything—beyond definitions, beyond even existence vs. non-existence.
- Plotinus called this "The One"—not a "thing" but the source of all things.
- Hinduism (Advaita Vedanta) calls it Brahman—pure existence without attributes.
- Paul Tillich described God as "Being Itself," not just a powerful entity.
###
Tier 0 in Fiction (The Highest Tier)
A
Tier 0 character isn’t just "the strongest being"—it
transcends all distinctions, logic, and even existence vs. non-existence.
- Not a "person" or "object" (no limits, no form).
- Cannot change, divide, or have equals (since that would imply limits).
- Not bound by time, space, or causality (it’s the reason they exist).
###
Common Questions
- Can a Tier 0 lose? No—it’s beyond all possible challenges.
- Can there be multiple Tier 0s? No, because that would imply division.
- Does Tier 0 transcend nonexistence? Yes—it’s beyond all concepts, even "nothingness."
###
Conclusion
Omnipotence isn’t just "infinite power"—it’s about being
the foundation of reality itself, beyond all limits, definitions, and contradictions. A
Tier 0 character in fiction embodies this idea—not just a god, but
the source of all existence.
Would you like any part explained further?