The paradox of psychological recovery reveals itself when comparing two characters with identical growth trajectories but inverse emotional directions. While one navigates the world as a former failure attempting to construct a functional adult identity, the other operates as an ancient deity attempting to reclaim the vulnerability of childhood. This comparison highlights a fundamental divide in how isekai handles trauma: one treats growth as an ascent toward social integration, while the other treats it as a descent into emotional openness. The gap in their YPS tiers—YPS-4 versus YPS-6—renders a combat comparison meaningless, as the scale shifts from a strategic national asset to a planetary force of nature. Instead, the real tension lies in their relationship to agency. Rudeus fights a constant internal war against his own cowardice to protect his family, exercising a level of self-determination that Milim lacks despite her superior destructive ceiling. Milim’s narrative is defined by a surrender to companionship, trading her isolation for the structure provided by others. Rudeus builds his own structure from the wreckage of a previous life. These two profiles prove that a significant development in a high-power setting is not the acquisition of new abilities, but the willingness to be known by others. One finds peace by becoming a man; the other finds peace by finally being allowed to be a child.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.