Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-31126847-20170228141842/@comment-29564364-20170721124555

User143526538 wrote: Transfictional AA is not a power either. Why? Because literally no character in fiction can have it. It's all fiction, no character from your verse can come and kill you irl, no matter what you say. It's just another way of saying that you're that author of that verse, nothing else. And because no character in fiction can ever have it, it technically isn't even a superpower. You can't just call things you see in real world as powers, because fiction and real life are 2 seperate things(even though fiction is made by those exist in real life, but that's not the point), they can't have powers that we have, and vice versa. SPW lists only powers seen in fiction, otherwise there would be a page for every single activity that can be done irl.

TL;DR Transfictional AA cannot be obtained by any characters which contradict the term Superpower, and thus, it isn't a power in the first place. I have to agree with most of what you said except one thing: "[...] they can't have powers that we have, and vice versa." That claim is false as demonstrated by the since the reason those powers appear in fiction is because they were observed in reality to begin with. Also, it's a matter of perspective. If you compare a real life person to fiction, then they automatically have Omnilock, Fiction Manipulation through Author Authority, Meta Art Manipulation and Reality Dreaming; Fictional characters in regards to reality, would have Ink & Paper Mimicry or Pixel Mimicry depending on the media they appear in; A real life person in regards to reality would have maybe one or many Real Powers, depending on their skills and aptitudes; And fictional characters in regards to fiction would be as they are currently portrayed, with or without Real Powers and/or, depending on the individual.

So yes, we can have powers that would be considered supernatural in fiction, but they would be considered natural and even mundane in reality.