Power scaling is irrelevant here because authority-type abilities and physical-type combat operate on separate metaphysical axes. Comparing a YPS-5 anomaly to a YPS-3 combatant is a category error; the question is not who wins, but how power defines the self. Mile exists as a prisoner of her own ceiling, utilizing a facade of mediocrity to hide a capacity that renders her own desires obsolete. Her narrative is one of subtraction, where success is measured by how little of her true self she reveals. Conversely, Sylphiette views power as a vehicle for transformation. Her evolution from a bullied child into the "Fitts" persona demonstrates a conscious effort to bridge the gap between her vulnerability and her ambitions. While Mile’s static DNA profile reveals a character whose identity is suppressed by an unwanted gift, Sylphiette’s high growth score marks a journey of earned competence. Mile is a god pretending to be a human to find peace, whereas Sylphiette is a human striving for superhuman capability to secure her place beside another. This contrast exposes the genre's two poles: power as an inherited burden that isolates, and power as a hard-won asset that integrates.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.