Talk:Author Authority/@comment-5265497-20141031215352/@comment-5265497-20141103104743

"Fiction isn't real life, so non-mentioned characters are technically nonexisent within the context of the story." When you include planeswalking in the story, it gives you a much greater area and presence in the story and unlimited possibilities coexist within the balance of all things. Sure I could use the perspective of a benevolent king or a neutral deity giving my protagonist supreme power and respect, but I also seek to explore another possibility within the continuity.

This is why I don't really consider myself solely in the position of a writer, but also a "cameraman" capturing one of those many possibilities that fiction provides and with strife and struggling inevitably being an integral part of every multiverse, you could just say it's simply another perspective from another normal character who simply wasn't as lucky. Even if I use a character with no powers at all, I could still grant it the perfect life by providing [or capturing] a species harnessing Q (Star Trek) level technology or maybe a character that is content within 'The Matrix'.

The character may hate me but would ultimately exonerate me because, unless the entire multiverse was perfect, it's just another perspective from the inherent general imperfection that is replete within the reality that we all subconsciously created and just casting a character with an easy life would not be taking advantage of the immense probabilities. I might undertake an ambitious project of creating the perfect universe as god would make it soon enough though, but I'm going to have to go through a lot of thought to make it a sincere version