The true metric of power in isekai is not the ability to destroy, but the capacity to retain a sense of self against the gravity of a predetermined role. Comparing a YPS-3 authority-type administrator to a YPS-6 physical-type force of nature renders traditional power scaling irrelevant; one manages the system while the other ignores it. Instead, the meaningful comparison lies in how both characters navigate the prison of their own archetypes. Hakuto Kunai operates his existence as a management simulation, leveraging administrator status to build hospitals and resorts, yet he faces a slow, systemic erasure of his original salaryman identity. Milim Nava exists as a planetary deterrent whose playful demeanor masks a profound emotional stagnation born from ancient trauma. While Kunai fights an additive battle to construct a civilization, Milim fights a subtractive battle to shed the isolation of her godhood. Both characters possess high Growth and Bonds scores, signaling a shared narrative truth: whether power is derived from a system console or raw physical energy, it functions as a barrier to intimacy. Their arcs reveal that the only way to escape the vacuum of absolute power is through the cultivation of named relationships. Kunai’s reliance on his summoned NPCs and Milim’s desperate search for companionship prove that relational weight is the only currency that matters when the physical world is already conquered.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.