User:Fictioncreator

WIKI

= Tiering System = '''This page is extremely important. In order to understand many things around here and in order to start making your own profiles and debating, you need to know this system.'''

Preamble
It should be noted that sometimes having overall destructive capacity is not enough to defeat others that harbor "broken" or "hax" abilities.

Identically, two characters in the same tier do not necessarily need to be equivalent in terms of power. The energy difference between them can range from negligible to absolutely titanic, dependable upon the tier.

Furthermore, a higher tier character cannot always beat a character with a lower tier, especially if their power levels are close to each other and/or their foe has ridiculous hax.

Explanation of the Tiering System
This system is based on the principle that adhering to infinity in projective Geometry, and the concept of a Hausdorff dimension, each higher spatial dimension is more than inaccessibly greater than the preceding number of any magnitude. For example, how many squares would stack into a cube? Since true 2-dimensional squares don't have any height (since we're stacking them), it would take more than an infinite amount for it to even be remotely possible to fill a true 3-dimensional cube. Kindly see this video for a more detailed explanation with easier to understand examples.

To add upon this, according to Brane Cosmology, a universe consists of a 4-dimensional (3 spatial dimensions [length, width and height] + 1 temporal [time] dimension) brane in a higher-dimensional structure, with our multiverse containing something on the order of 10^500 (an extremely large number. To grasp how ridiculously gigantic it is, one billion is only 10^9) of them.

The M-Theory defines the total and complete sum of an entire multiverse, with all higher dimensions included, as a 10 to 11-dimensional structure. We tail the conventions of a complete and full multiverse being 11-dimensional, unless stated otherwise.

DO NOTE that the prior two paragraphs are just describing two possible models for how dimensions can work in a cosmology and shouldn't be generally assumed and are only primarily listed as examples, such as if they were to be presented as true in the context of the story.

11-C: Point level
0-dimensional Characters

11-B: Line level
1-dimensional characters

11-A: Plane level
2-dimensional characters

10-C: Below Average Human level
Physically impaired humans. Small animals.

10-B: Average Human level
Normal human characters.

10-A: Athlete level
Athletes, what you'd think most fighting characters from action movies would scale to at a glance.

9-C: Street level
Peak Humans to Low Superhuman. Few physically very strong olympic level athletes and martial artists in real life. Most protagonists and final villains from action/martial arts movies may scale to here at a glance. Large animals.

9-B: Wall level
Characters/Weapons who can destroy a wall, or those who can easily harm characters with wall level durability. Very large animals.

9-A: Room/Small Building level
Characters/Weapons who can destroy a room or a small building, or those who can easily harm characters with room level durability. Extremely large animals.

8-C: Building level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * 8-C: Building level
 * High 8-C: Large Building level

Characters/Weapons who can destroy a building, or those who can easily harm characters with building level durability.

8-B: City Block level
Characters/Weapons who can destroy a city-block, or those who can easily harm characters with city-block level durability.

8-A: Multi-City Block level
Characters/Weapons who can destroy multiple city-blocks, or those who can easily harm characters with multi city-block level durability.

7-C: Town level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low 7-C: Small Town level
 * 7-C: Town level
 * High 7-C: Large Town level

Characters who can destroy a town, or those who can easily harm characters with town level durability.

7-B: City level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low 7-B: Small City level
 * 7-B: City level

Characters/Weapons who can destroy a city, or those who can easily harm characters with city level durability.

7-A: Mountain level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * 7-A: Large City/Mountain level
 * High 7-A: Large Mountain/Small Island level

Characters/Weapons who can destroy a large mountain, or those who can easily harm characters with mountain level durability.

6-C: Island level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * 6-C: Island level
 * High 6-C: Large Island level

Characters/Weapons who can destroy a large island, or those who can easily harm characters with island level durability.

6-B: Country level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low 6-B: Small Country level
 * 6-B: Country level
 * High 6-B: Large Country/Small Continent level

Characters who can destroy a country, or those who can easily harm characters with country level durability.

6-A: Continent level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * 6-A: Continent level
 * High 6-A: Large Continent/Multi-Continent level

Characters who can destroy a continent or multiple countries, or those who can easily harm characters with continent level durability.

5-C: Moon level
Characters who can destroy a moon, or an astrological object of similar proportion.

5-B: Planet level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low 5-B: Small Planet level
 * 5-B: Planet level

Characters who can create/destroy a planet.

5-A: Large Planet level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * 5-A: Large Planet level
 * High 5-A: Dwarf Star level

Characters who can create/destroy large gas giants such as Jupiter and Saturn.

4-C: Star level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low 4-C: Small Star level
 * 4-C: Star level
 * High 4-C: Large Star level

Characters who can create/destroy a star.

4-B: Solar System level
Characters who can create/destroy a solar system.

4-A: Multi-Solar System level
Characters who can create an omnidirectional explosion with the force to destroy at least two solar systems.

3-C: Galaxy level
Characters who can create/destroy a galaxy.

3-B: Multi-Galaxy level
Characters who can create/destroy multiple galaxies.

3-A: Universe level
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Universe level: Characters who can destroy and/or create all of the physical matter within an observable universe at full power. More specifically, usually via an explosion, omnidirectional energy blast, or a shockwave, that encompasses all of the stars and planets within a universe.
 * High Universe level: Characters who have an infinite power while not having 4D AP, a lot of infinite energy statements would be a good example for this tier.

Tier 2: Macrocosmic

 * Universe level+: ("Low 2-C") This is for characters who can destroy and/or create a 4-dimensional construct such as tesseracts or hypercubes. Common feats that would also be on this level include creating and/or destroying the entirety of the 4-dimensional container of one universe, not just the physical matter within one. For example an entire timeline would often include the entire 4-dimensional vector space.

2-C: Multi-Universe level/Low Multiverse level

 * Multi-Universe level/Low Multiverse level: Characters who can destroy and/or create 2 and up to 1000 universal 4-dimensional constructs/containers.

2-B: Multiverse level
Characters who can create and/or destroy 1001 to any higher finite number of universal 4-dimensional constructs/containers.

2-A: Multiverse level+
This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Multiverse level+: Characters who can destroy and/or create an infinite number of universal 4-dimensional constructs.
 * High Multiverse level+: Characters who are 5-dimensional, and/or can destroy and/or create 5-dimensional constructs to a greater degree than Multiverse level+

1-C: Complex Multiverse level
These are 6-11-dimensional characters. Even 6-dimensional characters can logically easily destroy a more than infinite number of 5-dimensional constructs, and 7-dimensional characters exceed that scale a more than infinite number of times, and so onward. However, these characters do not exceed the 11-dimensional scale of the totality of a full multiverse, as defined by M-Theory. Note, these tiers are not based off how M-Theory views these dimensions, but that M-Theory cites there being this many dimensions existing.

This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low Complex Multiverse level: 6-dimensional characters.
 * Complex Multiverse level: 7-dimensional, 8-dimensional and 9-dimensional characters. Alternatively ones that are positioned at an unknown/unspecified level within this category.
 * High Complex Multiverse level: 10-dimensional and 11-dimensional characters.

1-B: Hyperverse level
12-dimensional beings and above. These are characters that are beyond complex multiversal scale.

"Hyperverse" in this case comes from two words: "Hyper", which is used in mathematics to designate higher-dimensional space, and something extreme, above or beyond the usual level. As well as "verse" as a short for "universe." So it is intended as a description of a superior higher-dimensional existence, beyond conventional reality.

12-dimensional characters are a more than infinite number of times greater than a full complex multiverse, 13-dimensional characters are greater than an infinite number times that and so onward.

This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low Hyperverse level: 12-dimensional characters (That vastly exceed multiversal scale, but are still loosely related to it)
 * Hyperverse level: Characters with a finite number of dimensions greater than 12.
 * High Hyperverse level: Infinite-dimensional Hilbert spatial characters, or any number of dimensions higher than infinity.

1-A: Outerverse level
Characters that have no dimensional limitations, and are beyond scientific definition there of.

Basically, a being or an object which is outside and beyond all concepts of space. Things that would be considered this tier would usually but not always something completely formless, abstract, and transcendental. The usual scale does not make sense against a beyond-dimensional object. Such beings can not be affected by destruction within the confines of space, physical matter, and energy. This "space" in which there is no dimension can be the background for any dimensional space. Within such a beyond dimensional "space," a dimensional structure with any number of dimensions can be placed, because there are no restrictions regarding dimensions.

Note that all 1-A characters whose size would be considered Outerversal in size, would be beyond the scopes of dimensioned concepts.

This category is separated in the following manner:


 * Low Outerverse level: Characters that are beyond all dimensional scale, i.e., dimensionless characters that are superior to dimensionality as a whole, or characters that can create/destroy structures of this magnitude.
 * Outerverse level: Characters that are transcendent to the concept of dimensionality, as well as characters capable of destroying/creating such structures.
 * High Outerverse level: Characters/structures that dwarf other things that fit the definition of Outerverse level to the same extent that an Outerverse level character dwarfs anything below that would fall under this definition.

1-S: Extraverse level
Characters who exist so far beyond the baseline of Outerverse level and High Outerverse level that using such tiers to categorize them has become cumbersome. This tier is usually used for talking about some of the largest and or strongest things that have been found in fiction, and is not something that should be seen as the next new thing to try to put characters at.

This tier is currently occupied by the following category:


 * Extraverse level: Characters who can create, destroy, or significantly affect structures which would have their "size" expressed as infinity on a scale where 1 is baseline Outerverse level and 2 is baseline High Outerverse level. This however is just the baseline for the tier as Characters, Structures, etc. can be bigger, stronger, or more impressive than this baseline.
 * Above the system: Characters who are beyond or "above" mathematics or logic
 * Above the system: Characters who are beyond or "above" mathematics or logic
 * Above the system: Characters who are beyond or "above" mathematics or logic
 * Above the system: Characters who are beyond or "above" mathematics or logic
 * Above the system: Characters who are beyond or "above" mathematics or logic
 * Above the system: Characters who are beyond or "above" mathematics or logic