The fundamental tension in isekai power lies not in the scale of destruction, but in the source of agency. Because Shin operates on physical output (YPS-4) and Touya functions through divine authority (YPS-S), a direct combat comparison is meaningless. One breaks the laws of physics through calculation; the other is the law. The real divergence appears in their DNA profiles, specifically the Ego dimension. Shin's modest ego drives him to innovate, using his knowledge of modern science to reshape magical formulas, making his progression an act of intellectual conquest. He remains a participant in his world, navigating the friction between his destructive potential and his loyalty to Sicily. Touya, conversely, exists as a vacuum of ego. By absorbing every available power and building a harem of subordinates, he ceases to be a protagonist and becomes a benevolent administrative layer of the world. He does not solve problems; he simply removes the possibility of conflict. While both characters boast peak Growth and Bonds, Shin's journey is a study in the application of skill, whereas Touya's is a study in the management of abundance. The difference is the gap between a prodigy who masters a craft and a deity who inherits a sandbox. Shin's narrative exists to see how much a human can achieve; Touya's exists to see how much a god can accumulate.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.