True progression in an isekai setting is often confused with the accumulation of technical data, but this pairing reveals that technical mastery is actually the enemy of character growth. The gap between a YPS-4 Nation Level deterrent and a YPS-3 City Level combatant is wide, yet the narrative weight shifts entirely toward the lower-ranked character. Mathias operates as a closed loop; his journey is a restoration project where he simply corrects the world's errors using physics-based magic and ancient theories. His zero Ego score reflects a man who is not driving a story, but executing a pre-calculated script written in a previous life. In contrast, Sylphiette’s ascent from a bullied child to the disguised operative Fitts represents a genuine transformation of identity. While Mathias treats magic as a solved equation, Sylphiette uses her aptitude as a desperate means to bridge the gap between her vulnerability and her need for agency. The darkness inherent in her journey—the social isolation and the adoption of a masculine persona—provides a psychological depth that a clinical perfectionist cannot reach. This comparison proves that a higher YPS tier often correlates with a stagnation of the self. When power is a known quantity, the character ceases to evolve and instead becomes a tool for the plot's efficiency.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.