What does an probability manipulator do?
Theories of probability state that for any action, there can be multiple outcomes. Schrodinger’s hypothesis (the famous cat experiment) states that until an action happens, there is an equal chance of every outcome, and that those chances all exist simultaneously. By manipulating the likelihood of a specific outcome, probability manipulators can alter an event and skew the chance that a certain instance will occur. Other theories state that there are ‘strings’ of probability linking everything in the universe, and by altering the relationships between objects and events, outcomes can be controlled, from the angle of deflection between two billiard balls to the flip of a coin, by altering the probability along a certain string, different results may be obtained. It has been established that prolongued tweaking of things to one type of outcome can result in a “lucksnap”, where a storm of events of the opposite outcome occur. This was first seen in Bleeding, where Jennie’s prolongue use o