There is a leveling off, where what you are doing is no longer scaling. Initially, everything works as it should. More actions, more results, no visible blurring. But after sufficient density is accumulated, the relation shifts to a form which is not mentioned anywhere.
Nothing is blocked. It’s not being debited in a way you can peruse by action. The upshot of folding identical moves into spacings too tight, is to dilute the accretionary power of the deltas. It doesn’t collapse, it just stops growing at the same speed.
Since I knew where to look for it, I held the total amount of work constant and varied only its distribution. Doing it all in one go had a different effect than when it was broken up into several sessions. Same inputs, same order, but not the same accretion.
What is striking is that the program doesn’t seem to have any explicit limits. It does allow repetition, but doesn’t ensure that repetition will compound uniformly across all scenarios. Even density becomes a variable, although it’s never revealed as one.
Seen from that angle, $PIXEL is not exactly proportional to how much you do but how that doing is distributed and layered over time. Nothing is censored above ground. But how you group your actions secretly determines the distances to which they actually carry.
