- 3,608
- 4,087
Depends on the work.I wanted to ask you something, if a realm exists in such a way that the rest of the verse is non existent in comparison to its size, does it qualify for 1-A? And even then a 3-D character can enter that with a tier 1 technological source. Does it count as an anti feat?
Honestly speaking, almost anything non-contradictory can be somewhat accepted, even if it seems to be nonsense. It all depends on what these things mean in that particular work and how they can be explained. I can come up with an explanation for almost anything that seems to make no sense, but that won't have any validity if nothing is stated in the work itself.
Like, what does it mean with "non existent"? That can mean a lot of things. Something that is so far away that it can't be seen in any meaningful way might be called non existent, the same way something that is so small that it can't be seen, or even something that is just unimportant or weak. Something that exists in a lower dimension can be called non existent to a higher dimension. In the same way it can describe what is required for Tier 1 or even Tier 0 here.
If something is called "It's so low that it's as if it's nothing", it's basically a non-statement because there are no definitions coming from the work itself. We can guess if there's context surrounding it, but on its own, it can have so many meanings that we can't do anything with it.
If the context around it is about higher dimensions, we can go with that route, if it's about levels of existence, reality/fiction/dreams, we can go with a different route. Maybe the context uses all of these statements, and we need to guess what is the most likely statement that represents the setting under our system, and consider the other statements as analogical language.
So, answering your question, it can be if there's enough evidence of that in the work itself.
Using the Beyonders as an example, it's currently accepted that their statements about linearity aren't talking about a physical temporal dimension itself, but some higher narrative that binds the Beyonders in the same way a temporal physical dimension binds a physical entity. This isn't necessarily stated in the work itself, it's just that the context surrounding the Beyonders (Mostly they coexist on the same level as beings that are beyond time or as even transcending entities that already are beyond linear time), makes we need to use this interpretation to make sense of it.