The fundamental divide in isekai power is not a matter of output, but a reflection of the relationship between the individual and the system they inhabit. Comparing a YPS-6 planetary force to a YPS-2 awakened soldier is an exercise in futility because their abilities operate on entirely different axes. Instead, the meaningful comparison lies in their DNA profiles, specifically the tension between total autonomy and professional survival. Sung Jinwoo represents the complete capture of the system. His perfect Growth and Ego scores prove that for certain protagonists, the isekai mechanism is a ladder to godhood where the system becomes an extension of the self. He does not operate within the world; he consumes it, treating the narrative as a series of efficiency gains to ensure his own safety. Viktoriya Serebryakov represents the opposite: professional integration. Her role is defined by competence and endurance rather than escalation. While Jinwoo’s arc is about breaking every existing ceiling, Visha’s is about finding a sustainable floor within a brutal military hierarchy. This reveals a core dichotomy in how the genre handles non-physical power. One character functions as the Architect who rewrites the rules to escape the human condition, while the other functions as the Anchor who validates the human cost of those rules. Power for Jinwoo is the means to eliminate vulnerability; for Visha, it is the tool required to maintain a shred of humanity in a world of industrial slaughter.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.