Aarex's Abbreviation System (AAS) is an abbreviation system created by Aarex.
Lets get started. A number followed by an abbreviation means a number multiplied by this abbreviation's multiplier. Below this sentence, there is a conversion list. Each item looks like this: "[abbreviation] -> x[multiplier]"
See this pattern for last 3 items? If you put D after an abbreviation, it multiplies a number by 10^30 instead of 1,000. Lets continue.
Vg series is similar to D series, but it starts at 10^63 instead of 10^33. Tg series starts at 10^93, Qg series starts at 10^123, etc. Lets fill up all abbreviations up to x10^303.
And finally, Ce means it multiplies a number by 10^303. After Ce are UCe, DCe, TCe, etc. But there is a conflict for 10^309 and 10^333. They are abbreviated as 1DCe. To solve this, let change the abbreviation of x10^309 to DuCe. This list shows few abbreviations below x10^603:
Define Dc as x10^603, UDc as x10^606, DuDc as x10^609 (so there will be no conflict for x10^633), etc. To fill abbreviations up to 10^3,003, let Ce be after k and Dc be after Ce. Then there are Tc (-> x10^903), Qc (-> x10^1,203), Qu (-> x10^1,503), Sc (-> x10^1,803), St (-> x10^2,103), Oc (-> x10^2,403), and then Nc (-> x10^2,703).
The limit of tier 1 numbers is approximately 999*10^3,000, or 999NNgNc.
To start tier 2, define Mi as the multiplier of 10^3,003. To go further, the multiplier of 10^3,003 is actually MiU, not UMi, the multiplier of 10^3,006 is actually MiDu, not DuMi, etc. After MiNNg is MiCe (-> x10^3,303).