What I mean is this:
In the world, generally speaking, there is no justice in human relationships. The fastest, the smartest, or the most resilient people are not the ones who succeed. Because the world was designed this way by the simulator.
In games, however, there is generally more justice. In games without cheating—for example, in a chess match—the better player wins. The one with the higher rating, who is better prepared and more alert, wins. Because in chess, the rules were made by humans. When humans set the rules themselves, they try to make them as fair as possible, and only afterward are they manipulated by the simulator. Still, there is a sense of justice, there is logic.
In games, people actually superimpose a form of justice that does not exist in the real world. As long as you follow the rules in games, you play correctly and you win. Because games are human-made, and there is fairness in them. But outside of games, there is no justice. Real life is not fair. When you follow the rules and do the right things, you do not necessarily win.
This game, unlike human-made games, has not superimposed fair rules. There, a rule that is not written in the rules—or that was written before and accidentally erased, but known only to the game designer—has come into effect. This rule and the path that follows are triggered by the scenario. And it cannot be undone. This is not cheating, and it is not a mistake; this is life itself.
Merry Cristmas y'all.