The fundamental divide between these two YPS-4 operatives is not their output, but their relationship with failure. While both function as walking strategic deterrents, one treats power as an academic optimization problem while the other treats it as a survival insurance policy. Mathias views the world as a series of technical errors to be corrected, applying physics and sympathetic vibrations to restore a lost scientific standard. His pursuit is clinical, driven by the memory of a biological ceiling he once hit in his previous life. Conversely, Seiya operates from a place of systemic trauma, treating every encounter as a potential extinction event. He does not seek to optimize the world; he seeks to survive it. This divergence is evident in their DNA profiles. Seiya’s perfect Growth and Bonds scores reflect a man who has weaponized his fear into a rigid protective shell for others. Mathias, meanwhile, navigates a world of social ineptitude where his bonds are often secondary to his technical goals. The comparison reveals a stark truth about the YPS-4 tier: when the capacity for destruction is equal, the determining factor is whether the character is fighting to advance civilization or fighting to prevent its collapse.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.