Comparing a hybrid entity to an authority-based deity is a category error; the YPS scale breaks down when one character rewrites laws and the other simply administers them. This gap renders traditional combat analysis irrelevant, shifting the focus instead to the utility of omnipotence. The core divergence is found in the Ego dimension. Anos operates as a sovereign who imposes his will upon a world that fears him, turning his status as a misfit into a weapon of moral correction. His bonds are forged through mutual respect and the active pursuit of a peaceful era. He is a character who possesses power. Touya, conversely, functions as a passive recipient of divine favor. His journey is a sequence of additions—more wives, more land, more spells—without a corresponding internal evolution. He does not drive the narrative so much as he absorbs it. While Anos uses his YPS-7 capabilities to navigate a complex social and moral landscape, Touya's YPS-S status serves as a tool for frictionless domesticity. One is a study in the burden of absolute will, where every action is a deliberate choice to suppress destruction. The other is a study in the absence of friction, where the world bends to ensure a comfortable existence. This contrast reveals that isekai power is not a monolith, but a spectrum between active sovereignty and passive administration. Anos defines himself against the world; Touya allows the world to define him as its benevolent manager.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.