Board Thread:Questions and Answers/@comment-26315879-20190517004034/@comment-27804995-20190817032509

Seminolesinger2003 wrote: No character is undefeatable, and I am a strong believer of that. My friend told me today "It's a lot easier to destroy the seed than the tree it might grow into", so that really got me thinking.

One way would be to destroy the singularity of the seed, or the user, by going to a point in time as theyre using a power, and killing them a millisecond after theyre done using it, when theyre rendered weaker. Of course theres a lot that goes into this, this is just the shortest way I could put it.

Is there any other way anyone knows? Complicated or not, I'd like to know! thanks! alright. For one, Omnipotence when brought into a character battle gets really messy. Omnipotence could only mean that you hold absolute power in your respective realm/fictional world. For one, no. Going back in time would fail to defeat someone who is omnipotent. If they are omnipotent, they are omnipotent to begin with. They would exist before space/time in their world, and be omnipotent even back then. However, the one troubling thing about omnipotence is that: can they use their absolute power to create something with more power than they do? this is where the argument of omnipotence crashes. If they can, then they are no longer omnipotent, as the being they'd create would be more powerful than they are. If they can't, then they aren't omnipotent in the fact that they cannot create something stronger than them.

Okay, so we say that omnipotence ignores logic and the sheer fact that someone is omnipotent bends reality in a way that logic breaks down when it's applied to them. Even then, it's impossible to prove omnipotence, because there is no possible way to do everything and not have a completely f**ked fictional world.

Here is where the dread of the omnipotents-face-off happens. There can only be one; which makes it problematic as a said "omnipotent" would now only have as much power as their greatest feat. For example, creating the universe in such a circumstance would no longer make you omnipotent, only universal+, even though they created it effortlessly, as even then, there would be no real way to prove that their range is any higher than that universe's dimension +1. A 4D being would be considered omnipotent by a 3D entity's perspective, for example.