imagine a 2d creature, it knows width, it knows length, it does not know depth. to the 2d creature, all things are flat, and that is all they could ever be.
now, imagine a 3d creature, it knows width, it knows length, it also knows depth. it can see the 2d creature, and it can see the 2d creature's world, and it can see the 2d creature's limitations in a way the 2d creature simply cannot.
a 3d creature can do seemingly impossible things to and around the 2d creature, without breaking the laws of physics. the 3d creature can also change the perception of the 2d creature, recontextualizing how things appear, without the 2d creature being aware any manipulation is being done at all.
the 3d creature can do all of this, but so long as it follows the rules of a 2d creature, other 2d creatures might never know they are encountering a 3d creature.
this is the invisible dimensional advantage.
what's next: