Comparing a YPS-4 nation-level architect to a YPS-2 awakened soldier creates a fundamental mismatch in scale that renders combat analysis useless. Instead, the real value lies in their roles as the essential interpreters for their detached leaders. Both characters exist to bridge the gap between a protagonist who lacks human empathy and the world they seek to dominate. Demiurge takes Ainz’s vague anxieties and manufactures a thousand-year plan, turning accidental successes into systemic oppression. He does not just serve; he defines the protagonist's legacy by projecting a competence Ainz does not actually possess. Conversely, Visha acts as the emotional stabilizer for Tanya's hyper-rationalism. Where Demiurge escalates, Visha grounds. She turns Tanya's cold utilitarianism into a functional military unit through professional competence and quiet resilience. While Demiurge builds a facade of divinity for his master, Visha maintains the thin thread of humanity that prevents Tanya's battalion from collapsing into total madness. One weaponizes the protagonist's image to dismantle nations, while the other preserves the protagonist's utility to survive a world at war. Their DNA profiles reveal a shared reliance on the leader's will, but their functions are opposites: one is an accelerator of ambition, the other a buffer against burnout.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.