The true divergence between these two nation-level entities lies not in their destructive output, but in the direction of their psychological fragility. Because one operates through institutional authority and the other through raw physical dominance, a direct YPS-4 combat comparison is functionally meaningless. Instead, the point of interest is how they both weaponize administrative efficiency to mask deep-seated insecurity. Ainz is a corporate middle manager masquerading as a god; his dominance is a performance designed to prevent his subordinates from discovering his mediocrity. He wields authority as a shield, turning the governance of the New World into a high-stakes exercise in roleplaying. Alpha is the inverse: a genuine prodigy who views her own brilliance as a mere extension of another's will. While she builds a global economic and military hegemon from nothing, she remains trapped in a state of perceived inferiority, treating her agency as a borrowed tool. This is where their DNA profiles clash. Ainz maintains a moderate Ego because his actions, however anxious, drive the narrative. Alpha possesses zero Ego, as her entire existence is a reaction to a misunderstood savior. In both cases, the isekai framework uses YPS-4 scale power not to liberate the character, but to amplify their trauma. For Ainz, power is the stress of an endless performance; for Alpha, it is the gold-plated cage of a perfect servant.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.