The fundamental disconnect between hybrid power and divine authority renders a direct YPS comparison meaningless. One manipulates the laws of physics while the other simply dictates them. Instead, the real tension lies in how these characters utilize an absence of ego to achieve total systemic stability. While both function as omnipotent administrators, they represent two distinct fantasies of control: the geopolitical and the domestic. Rimuru utilizes the consumption of the Orc Disaster and the creation of a federation to engineer a corporate-style utopia, turning power into a tool for bureaucratic efficiency. Touya, conversely, leverages his ascension to a lower-rank god to curate a frictionless personal life, treating the world as a sandbox for domestic peace. This reveals a shift in the isekai genre where power is no longer a means of overcoming conflict, but a tool for removing it entirely. Rimuru is a sovereign architect building a state; Touya is a casual patriarch maintaining a household. The gap in their Bonds scores underscores this: Rimuru’s connections are strategic assets for a nation, whereas Touya’s are the emotional anchors of a family. Ultimately, the difference is between the ambition of a CEO and the contentment of a retiree, proving that in the upper echelons of power, the only remaining variable is what the protagonist chooses to manage.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.