The divide between two YPS-4 characters is rarely about destructive output and almost always about the psychological cost of entry. While both occupy the Nation Level tier, the divergence in their Darkness and Growth scores reveals a fundamental difference in how they inhabit their power. Asuna’s capability is a scar; it is the result of a systemic death game where efficiency was the only hedge against erasure. Her Darkness score of 48 reflects a willingness to endure psychological attrition that Shin Wolford never encounters. For Shin, power is an extension of curiosity and familial legacy, evidenced by a Growth score of 100 and a negligible Darkness score. He operates as a calculated risk-taker in a world that rewards his brilliance, whereas Asuna functions as a tactical anchor in a world that tried to break her. The tension in Asuna's narrative comes from the friction between her inherent empathy and the cold precision required to lead a guild in a digital purgatory. Shin's narrative lacks this friction; his bonds are a support system rather than a lifeline. Consequently, the comparison reveals that YPS-4 status means something entirely different when it is earned through survival versus when it is achieved through optimization. Asuna carries the weight of the fallen, while Shin carries the expectations of the living.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.