True power in isekai is less about the capacity for destruction and more about the psychological cost of maintaining a persona. Comparing a YPS-4 authority type to a YPS-6 physical type is fundamentally flawed because they operate on different axes: one manages a system, the other breaks planets. The real tension lies in how their DNA profiles reveal opposite struggles with identity. Ainz operates as a performative sovereign, where his Ego score reflects a desperate struggle to maintain a corporate facade for the NPCs of Nazarick. He is a prisoner of his own image, using his authority to distance himself from his remaining humanity. Milim, conversely, possesses a low Ego score, indicating that her actions are reactions to her environment and a deep-seated need for companionship. While Ainz uses his strategic dominance to construct a wall of subordinates, Milim uses her planetary scale to mask a profound emotional stagnation. Ainz is a man pretending to be a monster to lead; Milim is a monster pretending to be a child to be loved. This reveals that the genre treats non-physical power as a tool for social engineering and physical power as a barrier to emotional maturity.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.