The fundamental divide between these two figures is not a matter of scale, but of agency. Because one operates through physical cultivation (YPS-7) and the other through divine authority (YPS-S), a direct combat comparison is meaningless; they occupy different metaphysical planes. Instead, the data reveals a stark inverse correlation between divine status and self-determination. Han Li's ascent from a farmer with False Spiritual Roots to a law-rewriting entity is a grueling exercise in resource management and calculated ruthlessness. His high Ego score reflects a character who treats the universe as an obstacle to be overcome. He earns his sovereignty through millennia of solitude and the willingness to discard morality for efficiency. In contrast, Touya Mochizuki exists as a passenger in his own omnipotence. While he functions as a benevolent administrator and King of Spirits, his zero Ego score exposes the emptiness of the 'lottery apex' archetype. Touya does not solve problems; he inherits solutions. His YPS-S status is a gift that removes all internal friction, effectively erasing the need for a personal arc. Where Han Li's power is a fortress built from the ground up, Touya's is a gilded cage of divine convenience. This comparison exposes the hidden tax of wish-fulfillment: when the narrative removes the possibility of failure, it simultaneously removes the possibility of a meaningful identity. Han Li is a man who became a god through sheer will, while Touya is a god who remains a passive observer of his own life.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.