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For example, what's the difference between the following sentences?

ゲームで勝つことで、ポイントを獲得できる。
ゲームで勝つことで、ポイントが獲得できる。

Intuitively, I felt like the first sentence sounded better and example sentences seem to back that up. What's the difference between using を and が with a する verb (in potential form)? If both are alright, and when does one sound more natural than the other?

I have seen this post as well, does the same thing apply here?

Shurim
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    When I read the question in the list, I was initially baffled as to what you meant. Your question title is a bit confusing -- what you indicate by (名詞【めいし】) is not just any noun, but specifically a noun that functions as a する verb. Replace 獲得【かくとく】 with 鶏【にわとり】 or 飛行機【ひこうき】 or 果物【くだもの】, or any other non-する-verb noun, and all you've got is gibberish. **Suggestion:** Reword the question title slightly to clarify that this is for する-verb nouns. – Eiríkr Útlendi Jun 19 '22 at 00:14
  • I feel this is similar (but not exactly the same) to "score a point" vs "score the point". – dungarian Jun 19 '22 at 04:25
  • The difference is very subtle, but I think you have already found the right existing question... – naruto Jun 20 '22 at 03:36

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