Sure they do, Khan! It's all a matter of relative scale. Beating an OP character with an OP character is just as difficult to win as weak character vs a weak character. It just allows more Creative freedom![]()
GTFO. . . .G. . T. . F. .O. . . .
no
If I don't make the cut, I'll watch the insanity.
FIGHT THE GODS
Sure they do, Khan! It's all a matter of relative scale. Beating an OP character with an OP character is just as difficult to win as weak character vs a weak character. It just allows more Creative freedom![]()
J u s t i c e R e v e n g e M e r c y D e s p a i r L o v e H a t r e d F r e e d o m P o w e r A n s w e r s
It's all perspective Khan, while low-tier fighting require skill, high tier fighting requires just as much skill and much more forethought. It's like going from checkers to chess to GO, all have complexity, but the more complex the game, the more you have to think outside the box and plan moves further ahead to garner the win.
The writer who cares more about words than about characters, action, setting, and atmosphere is unlikely to create a vivid and continuous dream; he gets in his own way too much; in his poetic drunkenness, he can't tell the cart- and its cargo- from the horse.
-John Gardner
"Grieve not, wise warrior. It is better
to avenge one's friend than mourn too much.
Each of us must one day reach the end
Of worldly life, let him who can win
glory before he dies: that lives on
after him, when he lifeless lies."
Perhaps, but the stronger and more over the top your character gets the more options you have to pull out of any mistakes (if it's even possible to make them at this level) that you make.
Anyway, I'm in.
I guess it's time to put the Mad God to paper, metaphorically.
MelonHead does not give out free Melons.
Everyone makes mistakes, even at crazy levels. Just because you have the powers of the universe at your disposal doesn't make you unbeatable if the other person can do the same thing. Like I said it requires more out of the box thinking, which is why most people don't like to fight at this level. They simply can not do it.
The writer who cares more about words than about characters, action, setting, and atmosphere is unlikely to create a vivid and continuous dream; he gets in his own way too much; in his poetic drunkenness, he can't tell the cart- and its cargo- from the horse.
-John Gardner
"Grieve not, wise warrior. It is better
to avenge one's friend than mourn too much.
Each of us must one day reach the end
Of worldly life, let him who can win
glory before he dies: that lives on
after him, when he lifeless lies."
J u s t i c e R e v e n g e M e r c y D e s p a i r L o v e H a t r e d F r e e d o m P o w e r A n s w e r s