The gap between YPS-6 physical destruction and YPS-2 systemic authority renders traditional combat comparisons irrelevant. One operates on a planetary scale of violence, while the other operates on the scale of social engineering and game mechanics. However, their true alignment emerges when examining their near-zero Ego scores. Both characters function as anchors for their respective worlds, yet neither possesses a personal drive for sovereignty. Milim provides stability through the sheer weight of her presence, acting as a deterrent that forces others to organize, while Shiroe builds that organization from the ground up through the administrative labor of the Round Table. The distinction lies in their relationship to isolation. Milim’s journey is a regression from the loneliness of a god toward the vulnerability of a friend, using her destructive capacity as a shield against a world that cannot comprehend her. Shiroe’s trajectory is a progression from the isolation of a hikikomori toward the burden of leadership, using his authority to bridge the gap between players and the world's laws. While Milim struggles with the emotional stagnation of immortality, Shiroe wrestles with the trauma of systemic responsibility. This reveals a core isekai truth: highly influential figures are often those who never sought the spotlight. Whether rewriting a planet's geography or a city's economic code, power in these narratives serves as a mechanism for connection rather than a tool for conquest.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.