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:
Of course I don't pay. Omega has predicted that I won't pay if he asked, and Omega's predictions are by definition correct. I don't see how this is a decision problem at all.
Omega problems do not (normally) require Omega to be assumed a perfect predictor, just a sufficiently good one.