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As en electronics engineer I'm going to "Yes But..." this and say that the lower the voltage/current you're trying to manipulate the more concentration it requires to do it without over-voltaging the components you're trying to manipulate and frying the circuitry.
So whilst this would be possible you'd have to:
Hold all the cores, ALU, etc. in the CPU at the current state that they're in
Then spend time flipping the bits (not one at a time but like a whole 32 bit number) required to represent your instructions.
With enough practice and meditation you get a "feel" for the instructions and can do this but it takes time. I think this is fair as once you've learnt a CPU architecture most of the machine instructions are the same and it's just a matter of getting them to run in the right order.
This way you don't start out overpowered and there's a high skill ceiling.
(I may or may not be writing a book around this already and have thought about it a lot haha)
I was about to say, almost sounded like you were speaking from experience XD You'll be the first suspect if a supervillain with your powers ever pops up
(quickly hides cape and twirly mustache)
I have no idea what you're talking about officer