Talk:Author Authority/@comment-7050565-20170912225509/@comment-29564364-20170913131038

@SageM "Omnilock is by its very definition immune to everything. Thats what it means." The definition of Omnilock is to be outside of everything except fiction, not being immune to everything. While they indeed are very similar, they are not the same thing. And if you're going to argue against the inclusion of "except fiction" in the definition I provided, then prove it wrong by naming a single Omnilock user that is not a fictional character.

"And users of Origin Transcendence have transcended the authors's control." To transcend the author's control, a fictional character would have to transcend fiction, which is impossible by definition as doing so would make them no longer fictional.

"And non-created beings are considered anomaly's that were never made by anyone, including the author. there just simply there and they always have been." Name a single character that wasn't created. I'll be waiting.

"So the answer is no, users of omnilock and those other powers mentioned are and always will be immune to the authors control." Debatable.

The thing you don't seem to understand is that the instant a character appears in a work of fiction, they are automatically at the author's mercy regardless of their powers, be it Omnipotence, Omnilock or Origin Transcendence.