Talk:Logic Immunity/@comment-5725544-20130618052836/@comment-88.68.138.213-20130621171301

"The writer always wins, and the AA user wields its power."

Yes, but this doesn't mean that the AA has to win all the time.

I can prove it just this easy:

I choose Mxy (whose powers only work on the three dimenional rules, just to have it said) and Aurora to fight each other.

Aurora gets hit by a stone and dies...

The end.

Story written, with the AA user dying/losing.

As you can see, the writer indeed wins all the time, but the AA user doesn't.

Having the raw power doesn't help if you can't use it. The AA user is, as you already said to the CE user, nothing but a character.

You, DYBAD, once said that "in a serious fight the AA user would win, as as he/she is pretty much the embodiment of the author's will."

And I totally agree with you. I just want to say that, even though being the case most of the time, the "fact" that the AA user is the writers will's embodiment isn't part of the ability.

To be entirely serious, I wouldn't even count AA as an ability, having only one user and being nothing more than the embodiment of omnipotence with Plot Control (same counting for CE, also having only one user since the Beyonder isn't really a user if you ask me, and the remaning user being a pitiful example).

And even if I would leave out the Deadpool-example, there are other cases where a character-based plot-control doesn't mean instant win ( Zenkichi Hitoyoshi/Touma Kamijou).

Coming to your  "Cheating only works as long as you're not caught" comment: We both know who created this site, thus naming the ability, don't we?