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The final thing (I promise) I wanted to talk about was the Vortex on an omniversal scale.That sounds like it'd be just Low 1-C, yeah
There's 3 types of universes in the main-line Doctor Who multiverse.
- Paraward: An unknown (likely infinite) number of universes that diverged from N-Space before or after the Time Lords' era. Their physical laws are identical, but they didn't diverge from probabilities/possibilities, so they're considered 'extreme alternatives'.
- Altward: Basic alternate realities diverged from probabilities/possibilities, and they expand infinitely/exponentially. The sheer number of universes is so large that just a certain category of probability bundles includes several high order infinities of universes.
- Otherward: The Doctor Who multiverse is explicitly a Tegmark Type IV, with infinite universes based on utterly unique physical laws. For example, there are universes composed totally of alien energies, and where effect can happen before cause.
Then there's an omniverse with numerous other multiverses that each have their own rules.
Each universe in the omniverse has its own version of the Vortex that varies depending on local physical laws, and they culminate in a super-sized version so large that an interstitial tear in its axis alone can breech a number of multiverses. It keeps The Doctor's multiverse in check, and, where something bad to happen, the multiverse could even fall into this Vortex and just vanish.
Assuming N-Space is 1-B and laws of set theory, what level of transcendence could I get for the Omniversal Vortex?
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