

Matter Substitution: Substitute one collection of molecules with another.Mass Teleportation: Teleport large amounts of matter at once.Isoportation: Teleport short to shift facing.Teleport Dash: Combine high speed with teleportation ignoring normal rules.Coordinate Tethering: Lock-onto and allocate anything the user desires while transporting oneself or others.Extreme cases could see users who can use their teleportation to travel across different dimensions/planes/times. Teleportation is the basis of many superpowers based on the "travel/movement" of subjects in a wide variety of ways. A skilled combatant or strategist can use it for many innovative manners. While teleportation may seem like it is simply for travel, it can be a valuable ability as it can be used offensively (and quite powerful, as a spatial attack) while offering superiority regarding movement speed and distance coverage. This can be achieved by various means, including causing the atoms/molecules to travel at light-speed, warping the space, or use quantum superposition, in which the user teleports by spatially rearranging the subatomic contents of a system. The users can teleport moving instantaneously from one location to another without physically occupying the space in between or transfer matter (beings/objects, including themselves) or energy from one point to another without traversing the physical space between them. Apparition/Disapparition ( Harry Potter).Coordinate/Position/Spatial Change/Movement.12.7 Web Animation/Comics/Original/Series.Normal matter gets turned to light or faster-than-light particles which move very fast, and looks like teleportation at human time scales, but is really just very fast travel. In fact, the only place I've heard the term transport used for instantaneous travel is in Star Trek or parodies thereof, and even there it isn't instant. You could also use transport, but it suffers from the same problem as translocate it normally just means to move something between two places at normal speeds. Note that translocate also has the more common meaning of just moving something between two places, and doesn't always imply instantaneous transport. If you're using the term in a simpler context, I'd stick with teleport (a door between distant places, or the act of stepping through said door) or possibly translocale/locate (one location that exists in multiple distant areas, or the act of stepping between distant areas via the translocale). Terms like gate, rift, slip, slide, shift, jump, port, pop, warp, fold or beam can all be used in this context as local lingo for faster-than-light or instantaneous travel.

If you're doing some kind of worldbuilding, you can use pretty much anything you want as long as you explain it, either as a narrator or in-character. Tesser immediately brings up thoughts of tesseracts and higher-dimension thinking, but many people wouldn't even make that connection, let alone assume you're talking about teleporting.Īnyone familiar with the paper-folding analogy of wormholes might immediately make the connection between a fold and a wrinkle, but then they might not. Similarly, people who've never read A Wrinkle in Time might have no idea about tesser or wrinkle. Alternately, it looks like something French whose meaning I wouldn't begin to guess at. Without having seen in used in this context, I would assume the author meant the latter word.

I've never heard of jaunte, although it's clearly based on the word jaunt, which just means "a short journey". You could use the verbs tesser or wrinkle, from the children's book A Wrinkle in Time, if you're looking for a niche word.
