The fundamental tension between these two trajectories lies in whether power serves as a bridge to humanity or a wall against it. Because one operates as a physical mage and the other as a hybrid system-user, their YPS rankings—YPS-4 and YPS-6 respectively—operate on different axes, rendering a direct combat comparison irrelevant. Instead, the meaningful divergence is found in their DNA profiles. Jinwoo treats power as a tool for total autonomy, achieving a YPS-6 status that effectively erases his need for others. His journey is a linear ascent toward a solitary peak where ego replaces empathy. In contrast, Rudeus uses his YPS-4 capabilities not to dominate, but to anchor himself to a family and a society he previously feared. While Jinwoo's growth score is a mathematical certainty of the system, Rudeus's growth is a psychological struggle against his own history. The zero-to-hero trope in Solo Leveling culminates in a monarch who stands alone, whereas the reincarnator trope in Mushoku Tensei culminates in a man who finally learns how to belong. One achieves godhood to escape vulnerability; the other accepts vulnerability to achieve a meaningful life. The gap in their power levels is a distraction from the real divide: Jinwoo evolves into a force of nature, while Rudeus evolves into a human being.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.