Divine authority is a hollow shell without the agency to wield it. While both characters operate at YPS-3, meaning they possess the capacity to threaten an entire city, the delta in their DNA profiles proves that raw output is secondary to narrative intent. Aqua possesses the innate capacity of a goddess but lacks the ego to drive her own story, rendering her a static element in a world she cannot comprehend. She is a divine tool that consistently breaks the environment she is meant to protect, illustrating that high power without self-determination is merely a source of collateral damage. Contrast this with Hakuto Kunai, who treats his YPS-3 status as a corporate asset. Kunai does not view his authority as a birthright or a burden, but as a management simulation. By leveraging high bond scores through the creation of infrastructure like resorts and hospitals, he transforms destructive potential into administrative stability. Where Aqua is a goddess failing to adapt to mortality, Kunai is a salaryman successfully simulating divinity. The gap here is not one of capability, but of utility. Aqua remains a passenger in her own life, while Kunai uses his administrator privileges to rewrite the social contract of his environment. This comparison reveals that authority-type power is fundamentally useless unless paired with the ego to execute a vision. One is a divine tragedy played for laughs; the other is a bureaucratic conquest.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.