The gulf in capability between these two is stark—one operates at a city level, the other threatens planetary destruction. Comparing Goku and Cid Kagenou through the lens of power alone is a category error. The interesting tension isn’t *how* they compare, but *what* the disparity reveals about the isekai genre’s evolving priorities. Goku embodies the escalation inherent in shonen, a relentless climb towards absolute strength, while Cid demonstrates a fascination with the *performance* of power, and the consequences of a world taking that performance at face value. Goku’s narrative is driven by external challenges—stronger opponents—and his growth is a direct response to those threats. Cid, conversely, manufactures his own challenges, building a fictional world that then bleeds into reality. This isn’t about a lack of ambition; it’s about a fundamentally different relationship to agency. Goku’s Ego score is a perfect 100, reflecting his unwavering self-determination, but it’s a self-determination focused on physical limits. Cid’s Ego is high, but it’s an Ego built on a carefully constructed illusion, a deliberate misdirection. The result is a fascinating inversion. Goku, the world-ending warrior, is remarkably simple in his motivations. Cid, the ‘shadowbroker’ operating on a comparatively modest scale, is a far more complex character study. Isekai often rewards protagonists who solve problems with overwhelming force. Cid’s success lies in exploiting the assumptions of others, in a world that desperately *wants* to believe in his fabricated narrative. He’s a reminder that in isekai, sometimes the most potent power isn’t about what you can destroy, but what you can convince people to believe.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.