The divide between raw physical devastation and systemic authority renders a linear combat comparison meaningless. One operates at YPS-6 as a force of nature, while the other exists at YPS-S as a rewrite of the world's laws. However, their identical Bond scores reveal a shared narrative function: the use of total power to secure emotional safety. For Milim, this manifests as a desperate search for "fun" to mask the trauma of her origins and the loss of her family. Her power is a wall she builds around her vulnerability. In contrast, Touya utilizes his authority to construct a frictionless existence, removing all internal and external conflict to maintain a domestic sanctuary. While Milim struggles with the weight of her immortality, Touya treats godhood as a logistical tool for administrative peace. This distinction exposes the core difference between tragedy-driven and wish-fulfillment-driven isekai. One character is a survivor of a broken world who happens to be a god; the other is a curator of an idealized world who became a god by default. The lack of Ego in both profiles proves that neither seeks dominion for its own sake, but they differ in whether that passivity stems from emotional exhaustion or a total absence of friction.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.