Omega will either award you $1000 or ask you to pay him $100. He will award you $1000 if he predicts you would pay him if he asked. He will ask you to pay him $100 if he predicts you wouldn't pay him if he asked.
Omega asks you to pay him $100. Do you pay?
This problem is roughly isomorphic to the branch of Transparent Newcomb (version 1, version 2) where box B is empty, but it's simpler.
Here's a diagram:
Downvoted for the obnoxiousness of saying "of course" and not giving even the vaguest of explanations. This comment read to me like this: "It's stupid that you would even ask such a question, and I can't be bothered to say why it's stupid, but I can be bothered to proclaim my superior intelligence".
I'm sorry it came off that way, I just found it overly similar to the other various Newcomblike problems, and couldn't see how it was supposed to reveal anything new about optimal decision strategies; paying is the TDT answer and the UDT answer; it's the choice you'd wish you could have precommitted to if you could have precommitted, it's the decision-type that will cause you to actually get $1,000,000, etc. If I'm not mistaken, this problem doesn't address any decision situations not already covered by standard Counterfactual Mugging and Parfit's Hitchhiker.
(Admittedly, I should have just said all that in the first place.)