The gap between a YPS-2 and a YPS-3 is a distraction when comparing narrative catalysts against strategic anchors. Because one operates via social magnetism and the other via arcane output, their power types are fundamentally incompatible, rendering a direct combat ranking meaningless. The real tension lies in how they treat growth. Iruma Suzuki represents the isekai fantasy of accidental ascent. His Growth score of 100 is not a measure of effort, but of a world bending to accommodate a passive survivor. Through the Ring of Gluttony and a crippling inability to say no, he constructs a power base of loyalty that outweighs any physical destructive ceiling. Conversely, Sylphiette embodies the calculated pursuit of parity. Her transition into the "Fitts" persona is a conscious rejection of vulnerability, using the Laplace Factor not to dominate, but to close the gap between herself and Rudeus. While Iruma's low Ego reflects a character driven by the needs of others, Sylphiette's higher Ego demonstrates a woman who actively rewrites her identity to survive and support. Iruma is the center of a storm he did not create; Sylphiette is the anchor that prevents the storm from pulling her family apart. Their contrast reveals that isekai handles power in two distinct ways: as a reward for kindness that bypasses agency, or as a hard-won tool used to secure a place beside another.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.