The assumption that systemic power correlates with personal agency is a fallacy in the isekai landscape. Comparing a YPS-1 authority specialist to a YPS-2 physical combatant is fundamentally meaningless because their abilities operate on different axes; one manipulates the rules of existence while the other operates within the physics of war. However, their DNA profiles reveal a shared tragedy of dependency. Sora possesses an intellectual dominance that dismantles the hierarchies of Disboard, yet his Ego score of 15 exposes a crippling reliance on Shiro. His brilliance is not a tool for self-actualization but a mechanism for co-dependence. Similarly, Viktoriya Serebryakov functions as a superhuman asset within the Imperial Army, yet her Ego score of 0 reflects a total surrender to the military machine. While Sora uses game theory to bend the world to his will, he remains psychologically stunted. Visha provides the logistical glue that keeps Tanya’s battalion operational, yet she exists merely as a professional extension of her commander’s ambition. Both characters demonstrate that whether power is intellectual or physical, it often serves as a gilded cage. In the case of the YPS-1 strategist and the YPS-2 soldier, their utility to their respective systems is inversely proportional to their own self-determination. The genre frequently confuses the ability to influence an environment with the ability to control one's own life, leaving both the genius and the soldier as high-functioning satellites orbiting more dominant forces.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.