Character DNA · Head-to-Head
Shapes, not totals. The hero you worship defines who you are.
No Game No Life
SHIRO
YPS-2 · Awakened
VS
POWER25 / 92GROWTH60 / 100DARKNESS24 / 12BONDS45 / 100EGO15 / 0LUCK36 / 0
Character DNA · 6 Dimensions
In Another World With My Smartphone
TOUYA MOCHIZUKI
YPS-7 · World Ender
Finger Test
💭
Thought alone
God-tier dispensation lived at low intensity. Bonds harem-comedic but earnest.
POWER25 / 92GROWTH60 / 100DARKNESS24 / 12BONDS45 / 100EGO15 / 0LUCK36 / 0
No Game No Life
SHIRO
YPS-2
In Another World With My Smartphone
TOUYA MOCHIZUKI
YPS-7
Finger Test
💭
Analysis
YPS-2
Dominant power gap
YPS-7
DNA edges — character identity, not combat power
how much the universe protects them+36
self-determination and identity+15
moral cost they'll pay+12
ShirovsTouya Mochizuki
+67raw destructive ceiling
+55who they fight for
+40constant growth arc

Touya Mochizuki operates on a scale that renders comparison to almost anyone else functionally meaningless. He exists beyond the YPS system’s capacity to meaningfully rank, while Shiro remains firmly grounded in human capability, even at its absolute peak. This disparity doesn’t invalidate the exercise, however; it illuminates a core tension within isekai itself. We often celebrate escalation, the relentless climb in power, but Shiro’s narrative carries a weight Touya’s simply cannot. Touya’s frictionless ascent, his complete lack of internal conflict, reveals the genre’s inherent vulnerability to self-satisfaction. He *is* wish fulfillment, but a strangely hollow one. Shiro, conversely, is defined by her limitations. Her genius is inseparable from her social anxieties, her reliance on Sora a constant vulnerability. The stakes in *No Game No Life* are genuinely felt because Shiro *can* lose, because her intellect isn’t a guaranteed solution. Touya’s victories are preordained by his power level; Shiro’s are earned through strategic brilliance and a fragile, evolving connection with another person. Isekai frequently presents protagonists with world-altering power, but it’s the characters wrestling with human frailty, with genuine moral cost, who linger in the memory. Touya’s story is about building a perfect world; Shiro’s is about navigating an imperfect one, and the difference is everything. The genre’s obsession with power fantasies often obscures the more compelling truth: a character defined by what they *can’t* do is often far more interesting than one who can do anything.

Shiro
Dimension
Touya Mochizuki
Editor
25
Community
POWER
destructive ceiling
+67
Editor
92
Community
Editor
60
Community
GROWTH
trajectory & arc
+40
Editor
100
Community
Editor
24
Community
DARKNESS
moral cost willingness
+12
Editor
12
Community
Editor
45
Community
BONDS
loyalty weight
+55
Editor
100
Community
Editor
15
Community
EGO
self-determination
+15
Editor
0
Community
Editor
36
Community
LUCK
narrative protection
+36
Editor
0
Community
Cast Your Vote · 6 DimensionsCommunity pulse
SHIROLeft
Power25
Growth60
Darkness24
Bonds45
Ego15
Luck36
TOUYA MOCHIZUKIRight
Power92
Growth100
Darkness12
Bonds100
Ego0
Luck0

Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.