That'd still be preferable because all those sub agencies would have the
same 24 hour delay for modification, so it'd slow activitu down some.

On May 22, 2017 16:59, "CuddleBeam" <cuddleb...@googlemail.com> wrote:

> Agencies are Turing Complete currently (using its creator as output, the
> Power's text as memory and natural language as operators), so even if the
> amount of Agencies were limited, I would still be able to create
> "Sub-Agencies" within those Agencies, and then still have an arbitrary
> amount of things which are functionally equivalent to having a bazillion
> agencies.
>
> Here's an example template of an Agency which can emulate any arbitrary
> amount of Agencies (via Sub-Agencies):
>
> ---*---
>
> Name: Name here
> Agents: All persons
> Powers: For the purpose of this document, there exists "Sub-Agencies", as
> described within this Powers section, which is made up of a Name, Agents
> and Powers section which can be filled with text content. Only Agents which
> are part of the subset which Sub-Agency's Agents section refers to can
> employ the abilities described in the Powers section of that Sub-Agency.
>
> The following is a Sub-Agency:
> * Name: Sub-Agency 1
> * Agents: [Set of persons here]
> * Power: [Set of Powers here]
>
> The following is another Sub-Agency:
> * Name: Sub-Agency 2
> * Agents: [Set of persons here]
> * Power: [Set of Powers here]
>
> The following is another Sub-Agency:
> * Name: Sub-Agency 3
> * Agents: [Set of persons here]
> * Power: [Set of Powers here]
>
> etc
>
> ---*---
>
> So even if there were limitations to the amount of Agencies a person can
> have, I could still have the exact same thing (functionally), just written
> differently.
>

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