If one takes that seriously and believes in Many Worlds one then has to ask why quantum computers are so weak.
No interpretation of quantum mechanics says anything at all about the extent of BQP, which is (as you well know) a purely mathematical question that has nothing to do with the laws of physics.
MWI implies that quantum computers compute BQP, and depending on how you specify Copenhagen, it implies either that quantum computers compute P or that they compute some mystical complexity class whose definition depends on the notion of "observer." This is the sense in which quantum computation provides evidence for MWI. Your comment is unrelated to the reasons for Scott Aaronson's agnosticism.
I think we're discussing different aspects. The essential argument for MWI based on computational issues I'm addressing is that in the second to last paragraph of the above post:
...On a related note, in one of David Deutsch's original arguments for why Many Worlds was straightforwardly obvious from quantum theory, he mentions Shor's quantum factoring algorithm. Essentially he asks any opponent of Many Worlds to give a real account, not just a parochial calculational account, of why the algorithm works when it is using exponentially more resources than coul
From a recent paper that is getting non-trivial attention...
From my understanding, the result works by showing how, if a quantum state is determined only statistically by some true physical state of the universe, then it is possible for us to construct clever quantum measurements that put statistical probability on outcomes for which there is literally zero quantum amplitude, which is a contradiction of Born's rule. The assumptions required are very mild, and if this is confirmed in experiment it would give a lot of justification for a phyicalist / realist interpretation of the Many Worlds point of view.
More from the paper:
On a related note, in one of David Deutsch's original arguments for why Many Worlds was straightforwardly obvious from quantum theory, he mentions Shor's quantum factoring algorithm. Essentially he asks any opponent of Many Worlds to give a real account, not just a parochial calculational account, of why the algorithm works when it is using exponentially more resources than could possibly be classically available to it. The way he put it was: "where was the number factored?"
I was never convinced that regular quantum computation could really be used to convince someone of Many Worlds who did not already believe it, except possibly for bounded-error quantum computation where one must accept the fact that there are different worlds to find one's self in after the computation, namely some of the worlds where the computation had an error due to the algorithm itself (or else one must explain the measurement problem in some different way as per usual). But I think that in light of the paper mentioned above, Deutsch's "where was the number factored" argument may deserve more credence.
Added: Scott Aaronson discusses the paper here (the comments are also interesting).