Comparing a YPS-4 tactical powerhouse to a YPS-S deity highlights the futility of measuring isekai characters solely by their destructive ceiling, as these two operate on entirely different planes of narrative existence. Alpha exerts influence through the meticulous, cold administration of global conflict, while Touya maintains a reality where conflict is essentially a logistics problem to be solved via divine intervention. The real divergence emerges in how they construct their worlds: Alpha functions as an architect of tension, her agency entirely consumed by the desperate, self-imposed need to prove her utility to a perceived master, even as she builds a hegemony that overshadows her supposed superior. Touya, conversely, is an architect of total neutralization. He possesses every tool required to rewrite his environment, yet he possesses no desire to actually change it. Where Alpha’s story is driven by the internal ache of her own perceived inadequacy, Touya’s story is a frictionless expansion of domestic stability. One character proves that absolute power is compatible with profound tragedy, while the other reveals that absolute power, when paired with the total absence of ego, inevitably collapses into the maintenance of a comfortable, static status quo.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.