Talk:Usagi Tsukino vs Madoka Kaname/@comment-27789707-20160225145816/@comment-794213-20160301034910

Alright, check it.

Madoka rewrote the laws of not only the universe we see in PMMM, but across all universes, as shown here:

And while it may seem insignificant or not like recreating a universe, there's this: While it does say "universe", remember. That's just that universe's Homura. An infinite amount of Homuras exist.

This was a casual thing, as she one-shot Kriemhild Gretchen (remember, that's only one witch, out of an immeasurable mount). And the rest of the universe with it. Considering that she destroyed witches across the multiverse, this power could be increased drastically.

Here's evidence that she is, indeed, a concept:

Need those questions answered?

"So....Madoka is omnipresent but decides to physicaly incarnate.....to slowly travel to dying Homura....for no reason."

Other than that she and Homura hadn't interacted for basically eternity and she's like really good friends with Homura?

"You don't think it's more plausible she just isn't omnipresent and has to physicall travel places. Like the fact that she had to physically travel to each Magical Girl that was despairing at the end of the series."

She did that all at once. So, she was traveling to every Magical Girl (across a Multiverse, just a reminder) all at a single time.

"Or that her arrow had to travel to hit Gretchen...."

Actually, since the other name is the "Concept of destroying witches", she destroyed the witches, then became a concept. If she didn't, that could all be chalked up to cinematic/dramatic effect.

"Or the fact that nowhere does it say she has Omnipresence. Being an Abstract doesn't give you omnipresence or I could just as easily say Usagi and Chaos are omnipresent."

Being an abstract doesn't give you omnipresence, but appearing to every Magical Girl at once, one-shotting those witches, and being the Law of the Cycle all at once kinda implies omnipresence, doesn't it? Also, since she is a concept, or, more accurately, a law, she actually is omnipresent. Laws of physics are omnipresent, as they apply no matter where you are.