The true cost of loyalty is rarely a matter of combat potential but rather the capacity to survive one’s own devotion. Placing these two figures side-by-side reveals that massive disparities in raw destructive output—moving from the skirmish-level precision of a maid to the strategic-deterrent scale of a master mage—are secondary to how each navigates the self-destructive impulse toward absolute service. While one is defined by a rigid, codependent duty that demands the total erasure of individual identity to validate existence, the other utilizes immense, nation-level arcane capabilities as a clumsy scaffolding to build a life he feels unworthy of inhabiting. The tension lies in their diverging trajectories of self-actualization; where the former finds her narrative purpose in an agonizing, forced detachment from her previous self, the latter treats his vast power as a side effect of his desperate, unending struggle to reconcile a wasted past with a present he is finally learning to earn. Both characters expose the hollowness of the hero trope, proving that the ability to shape the world—whether through a mace or a continent-altering spell—matters significantly less than the messy, ongoing work of untangling personal trauma from the service of others.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.