Bending is basically using your will to affect reality; because of Nautilus is a bit closer to chaos than most worlds, reality is a lot more flexible here. Bending has a lot of uses, but the most common one is to create things you want or need.
[Clu demonstrates by Bending up a cup of tea and offering it to Dumbledore.]
You're right about it affecting things here, in good ways and in bad. On one hand it's helpful, for obvious reasons. But on the other it makes dealing with serious threats a lot more difficult. And there are serious threats, not just to Nautilus, but to other worlds too.
See, Nautilus is something of a nexus, where a lot of different worlds intersect. So what happens here can spread to affect those other worlds, for good or bad. Under normal circumstances, certain people from here travel to other worlds to help fix flaws in that reality. But if a powerful and dangerous enough entity got control of things, a lot of serious harm could be done, and very few people from those worlds would be able to really do anything about it.
Re: Albus Dumbledore | Harry Potter (1920s-Fantastic Beasts era)
[Clu demonstrates by Bending up a cup of tea and offering it to Dumbledore.]
You're right about it affecting things here, in good ways and in bad. On one hand it's helpful, for obvious reasons. But on the other it makes dealing with serious threats a lot more difficult. And there are serious threats, not just to Nautilus, but to other worlds too.
See, Nautilus is something of a nexus, where a lot of different worlds intersect. So what happens here can spread to affect those other worlds, for good or bad. Under normal circumstances, certain people from here travel to other worlds to help fix flaws in that reality. But if a powerful and dangerous enough entity got control of things, a lot of serious harm could be done, and very few people from those worlds would be able to really do anything about it.