The Golden State Warriors are as good at basketball as anyone’s ever been. By season’s end, they may even prove themselves to be better. Their 56-6 record has them currently aligned with where the 72-10 Chicago Bulls were at this point, and we have to travel a full 20 years back to those Bulls to find a team that’s lit up the league to the extent that the Warriors are now. And for many contemporary fans, Golden State’s game-breaking, history-chasing brilliance is spectacle enough for the 2015-16 season.

But for those aching for a heavyweight bout between the Warriors and a worthy foe, the team’s showdowns with the Oklahoma City Thunder can’t be plentiful enough, and can’t come quickly enough.

To say that Curry is making video game imaginations come true would fall short of hyperbole.

The most recent game between the two Western Conference titans came this past Thursday, and ended as the other two have: with a Warriors win. Golden State pulled away for a 121-106 final score, marking their most comfortable victory over the Thunder of the year, despite their trailing for most of the game.

Their 121-118 overtime win against OKC came less than a week prior. That sensational contest showed us perhaps the best, most advanced basketball ever seen, featuring a court rich with men who are offenses unto themselves, culminating with MVP frontrunner Stephen Curry casually draining an improbable game-winning shot, just a few strides past the halfcourt line as the extra period expired.

Curry’s shot caused a ruckus rarely seen over a regular season game, turning Twitter into a roaring pub on a Saturday night when it would otherwise be dead. Steph is amidst what could turn out to be the single greatest offensive season in NBA history (his Player Efficiency Rating is currently 32.4, edging Wilt Chamberlain‘s single-season record of 31.82) and watching him has become appointment viewing—but this shot was something else entirely.

This was the result of the Warriors’ tightest competitors forcing Curry to take his game even further into the stratosphere, and start making shots that aren’t reasonable even by make-believe standards. To say that Curry is making video game imaginations come true would fall short of hyperbole; he is transcending your hoop dreams, and expanding the space that basketball fantasies can live in.

For those drunk on the Warriors’ dominance and moxie, their more recent 15-point win against OKC might register as a sign that they’ve “solved” their closest foe. But the loss should come with the caveat that the Thunder were on the second night of a back-to-back on the road, against another tight conference enemy in the Los Angeles Clippers. And it should also be noted that Russell Westbrook had an uncharacteristically paltry stat line for the night, shooting just 8-of-24 from the field—Westbrook is second to only Curry in overall efficiency this season, coming in at 28.3.

If we’re lucky enough to see these teams meet again in the playoffs, it will still be the case that their collective talent is so overwhelming that the ensuing games could produce any number of previously unseen feats, and challenge understood notions of basketball.