The fundamental tension in the overpowered isekai trope isn't the ceiling of destruction, but whether omnipotence reinforces or erases the individual's identity. Comparing a YPS-7 law-rewriter to a YPS-5 authority-user is functionally meaningless because they operate on different metaphysical axes; one manipulates the fabric of existence while the other wields systemic mandates. The real distinction lies in their DNA profiles, specifically the chasm between their Ego scores. Anos embodies the apex of self-determination, utilizing his power as a tool for moral architecture and the cultivation of bonds. His growth is not a climb toward strength—which he already possesses—but a progression in the sophistication of his restraint and his ability to invent systems like origin magic to reshape his world. In contrast, Mile represents the void of Ego. Her power is a cosmic clerical error that forces her into a state of perpetual performance. While Anos commands every room he enters, Mile spends her narrative energy trying to disappear from them. Her constant recalibration of magic to avoid detection shows a reactive relationship with her own nature, treating her abilities as a liability rather than an asset. One uses divinity to define himself; the other uses it as a mask to hide. This reveals that in isekai, the gap between a World Ender and a Continent Level threat is less significant than the distance between a character who owns their power and one who is owned by it.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.