can I just say I vibe with the "holy crap" "Inputting so much is fun!" panel on Page 11 really hard. Like, the whole "meta vision" thing IS totally describing something i've experienced / messed with / "attained" (temporarily) (in video games) (with enough practice and also effort to create that kind of broad expansive focus on all the available information in front of me, leading me to realize incisive next moves in a Flow kind of way).
like a lot of times the default behavior (as shown in this manga and as i've seen a lot in games and DONE a lot in games) is just to try to force your own gimmick or preferred strategy, and just hone that approach as far as you can until it just beats out other strategies through sheer Honed Superiority, while what's being called the "meta vision" approach in this manga is more to hone your ability to read the whole situation and in an ultra present-minded way realize what you need to do next in the moment based on a precise grasp of everything (or as much as you can process) that's going on in the moment.
(but of course the more tools/gimmicks you have in your pocket, the more options you have to use, so of course both honed techniques and Meta Vision Mindset are essential for total mastery.)
and managing to win with just Honed Superiority can be "fun" in a kind of ego-soothing way of "yeah, i'm just better", but winning with "meta vision" in my experience is way more thrilling because it's so much more dynamic and active and less "routine" and essentially about constant growth, so it's less of a pat on the back for all your past practice and the legitimacy of your efforts (blah blah ego insecurity stuff), and more of an exhilaration of just being absolutely present, being actually there, actually seeing the game state and actually playing it with absolute lucidity.
so for all the absolute "melodrama" of this manga, i really really like its exploration and depiction of subtle mental concepts/feelings in this kind of fast paced competitive environment
t. Isagi IRL
edit: on page 17, Kaiser's "And believe. For me, nothing is impossible." is a nice example of basically the absolute audacity required to try to pull off "meta vision" in the first place. Believing that it's even possible to process that much information and in-the-moment figure out something that will win the situation. And I say "audacity" more than "ego", cuz I feel like it's actually primary to try to reduce your ego as much as possible so that you're not distracted by "I'm great, I don't even need to be present in the moment to win" OR "I'm not great, I couldn't possibly win even if I focused" or anything. Just focus. Just absolute straightforward "trying to pull it off", not because you're great but because thinking about whether or not you're great is a distraction.
(if you do pull off something crazy then it gets even harder to not get distracted by thinking that you're great, though, which hurts your focus. It's hard!!!!!!!)