The fundamental disconnect between a YPS-1 human and a YPS-6 planet-level entity renders any discussion of combat capability irrelevant. Instead, the real story lies in their identical Bonds and Ego profiles, revealing that social magnetism functions as a universal constant regardless of destructive output. While one avoids doom flags in the Fortune Lover world through oblivious kindness and the other manages world-ending tantrums through a craving for playmates, both operate as centripetal forces. Catarina transforms her social circle by dismantling scripted hostilities, turning enemies into allies through sheer earnestness. Milim seeks a peer in Rimuru to escape the crushing vacuum of her own immortality, using her Concealed Form to mask a desperation for genuine connection. Their shared low Ego scores prove that neither character drives the plot through traditional ambition; they are reactive elements who reshape their worlds simply by existing as emotional voids that others feel compelled to fill. This comparison exposes a recurring isekai trope: the more extreme the power—whether it is the total absence of it or a surplus that can shatter geography—the more the narrative relies on relational weight to provide meaning. Power is a distraction; the ability to anchor others is the only metric that scales across these disparate tiers. The narrative utility of a noblewoman avoiding exile is functionally identical to that of a Dragonoid seeking a friend.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.