The fundamental tension here lies in the distinction between inherent sovereignty and acquired survival, rendering a direct YPS-7 comparison practically moot. While both characters operate at the World Ender scale, Anos utilizes a hybrid of conceptual magic and innate authority, whereas Hajime relies on a physical metamorphosis fueled by trauma and engineering. Because their power types operate on different axes—one as a natural law and the other as a technological violation of that law—comparing their combat output ignores the real story: the cost of their agency. Anos possesses an Ego born from total stability; his struggle is the burden of restraint to avoid erasing his surroundings. In contrast, Hajime’s Ego is a defensive weapon forged in the Great Orcus Labyrinth. His power is not a birthright but a scar. This divergence surfaces a critical truth about the isekai genre's approach to godhood. For one, reaching the YPS-7 ceiling is about the responsibility of an apex predator seeking harmony. For the other, it is the only way to ensure that no one can ever betray him again. The high Bonds score for Hajime isn't a sign of social integration, but a narrow, fortress-like devotion that contrasts sharply with Anos's broad, benevolent leadership. Ultimately, the gap isn't in their destructive capacity, but in why they choose to wield it.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.