True power in isekai is defined by systemic ownership rather than destructive capacity. Comparing a YPS-4 physical powerhouse like Alpha to a YPS-2 authority-type like Shiroe is a category error; one dismantles armies while the other drafts constitutions. The meaningful overlap lies in their roles as the hidden architects of their worlds. Alpha builds a global economic empire for a master she fundamentally misinterprets, converting her physical dominance into a tool for another's perceived brilliance. Shiroe leverages his mastery of game mechanics to force a fractured population into a functioning city-state. While Alpha’s DNA reflects a total surrender of Ego to a savior, Shiroe’s low Ego score stems from a desire to hide behind the "Villain in Glasses" persona. Both function as the actual intelligence driving their operations, yet they occupy opposite psychological poles: Alpha is a titan who believes she is a servant, and Shiroe is a technician who is feared as a mastermind. This divergence proves that administrative authority scales differently than physical force. Shiroe’s ability to rewrite the laws of Akiba exerts a systemic pressure that renders Alpha’s nation-level combat output irrelevant in a socio-political context.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.