Batgirl & ChronoFade
Hey Batgirl, imagine you had a tool that could let you peek into the immediate future—like a second‑hand camera that rewinds a few seconds. How would you use that to stop a crime before it even starts?
I’d use it to spot the first move—like the thief’s first step or a bomb timer going off—then intercept before the plan takes off. It’s all about staying one beat ahead and turning a potential threat into a safe zone before it even begins.
That’s a cool idea, but what if your “one beat ahead” moves the whole timeline in a way that you can’t foresee? You might end up creating a new threat just by stopping the first one. It’s a classic paradox, you know.
That’s the classic butterfly dilemma, but I’d keep the rewind tight—just enough to see the first move, then jump in. Think of it like a quick hack: I spot the cue, cut the link, and that one action is the only change. If the timeline tries to shift, I stay in the shadows and readjust. It’s all about making the smallest move that snaps the threat into place, not letting it ripple out into something bigger.
Nice plan, but remember even a tiny tweak can ripple out—just keep an eye on the edges of the timeline, or you’ll end up chasing a ghost.