> You need all aspects- history, narrative, concept, so on and so forth.
High-Godly Regenerationn: "The ability to regenerate after erasure from all aspects of existence, such as from history, narrative/plot, and conceptual/information destruction."
So, a character literally needs to be shown that they get erased at all of these described aspects of existence at once? Because if so, there would be very few verses that can actually fit that type of Regenerationn.
I thought it was just Regenerationn from one of these described erasure, but if the erasure needs to contain all of these aforementioned scale of erasure, then not many versus would actually fit by this standard (E.g. A character can regenerate from can erase their information/concept and remove them from history through all of time, but as the erasure isn't specified to remove targets from the plot/narrative, they can't qualify for High-Godly because the erasure doesn't include removal from the narrative/plot of the story they're in. Or if a character can regenerate from erasure that removes them from history and the narrative/plot, but since the erasure isn't specified to remove their concept/information, they won't qualify for High-Godly Regenerationn. Or even having their concept/information being erased through all of time, but other beings can still remember their existence destroyed by such an erasure thus they aren't actually erased from history, therefore they can't qualify for High-Godly).
Would a character need to regenerate from all the aforementioned scale of erasure, or just one of the aforementioned scale?