Stability in isekai narratives functions either as a reward for the privileged or a survival mechanism for the marginalized. Comparing a YPS-S authority figure to a YPS-2 physical combatant is a categorical error, as their impact on the world operates on entirely different dimensions. Touya represents the solved world, where divine authority removes all friction and transforms the setting into a domestic playground for managing abundance. He is the anchor of a wish-fulfillment vacuum, where the lack of internal struggle makes his ascent to godhood a bureaucratic formality. Visha, however, provides stability through professional endurance. In the industrial slaughter of the Empire's wars, she does not rewrite physical laws; she manages logistics and maintains the basic quality of life for a detached commander. Her value is not in her destructive capacity, but in her ability to remain human while operating within a hyper-rationalist nightmare. While Touya's trajectory is a linear climb toward total sovereignty, Visha's is a horizontal expansion of her capacity to survive. This contrast reveals two divergent uses of the anchor archetype: one serving as a reflection of the protagonist's effortless success, the other as a necessary corrective to the protagonist's inhumanity. One is the ceiling of the genre's indulgence; the other is the floor of its cruelty.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.