During the exploitation of oil and gas reservoirs, changes in reservoir physical or fluid properties will lead to alterations in formation seepage capacity, subsequently impacting the productivity of oil and gas wells. Therefore, it is crucial to evaluate the variations in reservoir physical and fluid properties as well as their influence on oil and gas well productivity during reservoir exploitation.It employs a descriptive approach to investigate cross-scale (i.e., micro-scale → small-scale → large-scale) fluid seepage phenomena in water flooding. By leveraging digital core reconstruction technology and focusing on micro-pore network simulation, it establishes an analytical framework for studying cross-scale seepage fields, facilitating the exploration of the micro-seepage mechanism that governs non-homogeneous water flooding's impact on liquid production capacity within a reservoir. Integrating constraints from micro-pore network simulation and small-scale core displacement test data, while considering macro-heterogeneity near wellbore areas as flow unit divisions and superposition bases within large-scale reservoirs, it reveals the nonlinear flow characteristics of changes in liquid production capacity in water-flooding oil reservoirs based on microscopic digital core analysis. This approach aligns with findings from small-scale core testing and sweep coefficient correction while also addressing the non-uniform distribution characteristics of physical parameters within large-scale reservoirs.By integrating permeability field characteristics at three levels, this approach optimizes its technical advantages in describing dynamic permeability fields at each level, thereby facilitating precise prediction of water drive oil development effects.