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:
That's a fairly good argument - simulation or something equivalent is the most realistic thing to expect. But since Omega is already several kinds of impossible, if Omega didn't work in a way equivalent to simulating the player it would add minimally to the suspended disbelief. Heck, it might make it easier to believe, depending on the picture - "The impossible often has a kind of integrity to it which the merely improbable lacks."
On the other hand sometimes the impossible is simply incomprehensible and the brain doesn't even understand what 'believing' it would mean. (Which is what my brain is doing here.) Perhaps this is because it is related behind the scenes to certain brands of 'anthropic' reasoning that I tend to reject.