Affect vs effect would be based on context here; for affect would be if they were affecting something, for effect would essentially be for the results.
Rather, affect is to change, effect is the result of change.
So, for affect would be correct because what they do is utilize wordplay to affect the result.
Or something, I'm too tired. It sounds complicated but it isn't as complicated as it sounds, it's just annoying for a lot of situations like this where both seem to be correct depending on how you are phrasing it
They forgot nothing. Bad actors playing with words for affect! (Effect? Shit I never know)
Affect vs effect would be based on context here; for affect would be if they were affecting something, for effect would essentially be for the results.
Rather, affect is to change, effect is the result of change.
So, for affect would be correct because what they do is utilize wordplay to affect the result.
Or something, I'm too tired. It sounds complicated but it isn't as complicated as it sounds, it's just annoying for a lot of situations like this where both seem to be correct depending on how you are phrasing it
Since you asked: For effect. To affect (verb). An effect (noun).