The inverse relationship between destructive capacity and narrative agency defines the gulf between a YPS-5 entity and a YPS-1 strategist. While Mile possesses the ability to flatten continents, her story is a study in stagnation; her power is a pre-existing condition that renders traditional growth obsolete. She does not evolve so much as she recalibrates, spending her narrative energy attempting to mimic mediocrity while accidentally erasing existential threats. This creates a paradox where her overwhelming authority strips her of ego, leaving her as a passenger in a life dictated by a cosmic miscalculation. Sora operates on a completely different plane of relevance. Despite lacking supernatural output, he wields game theory and psychological manipulation to dismantle the very hierarchies that Mile simply ignores. His narrative weight stems from fragility. Where Mile is an immutable force, Sora is a precarious construction of intellect held together by a symbiotic dependency on Shiro. This bond provides a level of emotional stakes that Mile’s isolated superiority cannot match. Sora’s struggle to navigate the Ten Pledges proves that intellectual dominance within a rigid system is more narratively fertile than possessing a ceiling that the world cannot contain. The tension here reveals a core isekai truth: the character who must outthink the world is fundamentally more interesting than the one who can simply overwrite it.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.