The fundamental tension in isekai power is not the magnitude of the output, but the relationship between the wielder and their intent. Comparing a YPS-3 physical combatant to a YPS-S authority figure renders traditional power scaling meaningless because they occupy different ontological categories; one manipulates matter while the other manipulates the rules of existence. However, the DNA profiles reveal a starker divide: the difference between power as an aesthetic and power as an amenity. Cid treats his capabilities as a costume, using an "I am Atomic" detonation not to conquer, but to fulfill a specific role-playing fantasy. His high Ego drives the narrative, forcing the world to bend and accommodate his delusions. In contrast, Touya exists as a passive recipient of divine generosity. Despite his YPS-S status, his Ego score of 0 proves he is a passenger in his own life, managing a harem and a kingdom with the mechanical neutrality of a civil servant. Touya has solved the world, which effectively kills the story, whereas Cid's refusal to acknowledge reality creates a perpetual engine of conflict and irony. One is a deity who acts like a man; the other is a man pretending to be a mastermind who accidentally becomes a god. The narrative weight belongs to the character who actually wants something from the world, regardless of whether that want is a delusional fantasy.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.