The vast disparity between a YPS-5 continent-level strategist and a YPS-2 awakened soldier renders a combat comparison meaningless, but it reveals a fundamental truth about isekai support roles: the less power a character possesses, the more essential they become to the narrative's emotional architecture. Benimaru is a manifestation of Rimuru's success. His evolution from Ogre to Kijin is a reward for loyalty, a linear progression within a managed ecosystem where growth is guaranteed by a benevolent deity. He operates as a Minister of Defense, but his agency is tied to the collective state, making him a pillar of stability rather than a driver of conflict. Contrast this with Visha, who possesses no such narrative safety net. She does not receive systemic upgrades; she survives the Russy Federation's collapse and the Imperial army's attrition through sheer professional competence and emotional resilience. While Benimaru’s DNA reflects a comfortable integration into a utopia, Visha’s zero Ego score is not a lack of will, but a calculated survival strategy. She provides the only genuine human anchor in a story dominated by Tanya’s hyper-rationalism. The narrative weight shifts from the one who can incinerate an army to the one who can make a sociopath feel a flicker of camaraderie. In the economy of isekai storytelling, Benimaru is a luxury of a powerful state, but Visha is a necessity for a broken world. The tension here is that the character with the lower YPS tier carries the heavier burden of maintaining the story's humanity.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.