A universe could be described as an independent segment of possibility, a cosmic building block of the Omniverse; a bubble of space with a defined beginning point (a Big Bang in the typical sense) and a set of physical laws, which may or may not line up with the ones humanity observes. Universes in the Multiverse share common laws of physics, and systems of logic, but differ in initial starting conditions upon being formed, and thus have entirely different timelines (same premise that The Timeline Creator used to create the Alternate Known Multiverse).
Universes, unlike all the following time and space formations that goes after them, aren't made out of other verses, but instead, cosmic structures, elementary particles, and just generally all are absolutely verse. Universes differ very slightly in size and average out in approximately a 100 billion light-year range.
Each Universe has a set of laws that govern everything inside without exception. Their laws can be broken, however, objects aren't actively breaking a law at any time. They simply stop existing or stop being contained by the Universe, as to counteract the law-breaking.
The laws in a Universe also typically only govern properties of objects within the said Universe, instead of primarily governing laws of inferior objects.
Borders[]
The border is often located at the boundary of its sphere of law influence. Universes may not have physical borders, but there are some Universes, whose boundary is constantly pushed by dark energy further away and the “border” is simply a cut-off for our law systems.
Some universe borders, have some sort of a negative attractive force that repels objects once they come close enough to our Universe. This causes a hill-like bend in spacetime, encircling the entire Universe in equal amplitude, and the line connecting all maximum negative attraction points is used as the official boundary and border.
Universes expand their border by various methods, most unnamable due to language limitations, but Universes in our large general vicinity are expanded by a force that either acts solely on the border, or one that occurs naturally but also interacts with the border as well.
Borderless Universes, in the form of LNB-2n, usually lose their border rather than having it be absent from the Universes very conception. This does not mean that the Universe's laws influence indefinitely far, as in, being borderless, but that they don't end abruptly but fizzle out. These types of Universes don't exactly have any special phenomena happing at the "fuzzy area" that could implicate a border either, but one can see from a far that the Universe's structures simply fizzle out after a certain distance from the center.
Multiverses[]
However, in a multiverse there are multiple universes - perhaps an immeasurable number - which may or may not contain humans or life at all. In fact, some of them may be so hostile that chemistry or physics as we know sometimes they don’t function as they should. As it’s often seen as there’s been that some universe have some kind of faults.
Known Universes[]
Notes[]
This page is based of the ‘data’ in All Dimensions wiki and the Verse and Dimensions Wiki.
Although the maximum range is the Omniverse it is suspected that there’s more after the Omniverse.