Measuring these two figures against a shared power scale is a category error, as Anos Voldigoad operates as a literal architect of reality while Shiroe functions as its most effective systems administrator. Where Anos redefines physics through raw assertion, Shiroe merely exploits the existing latency in game logic to manufacture political legitimacy. Because their power types—hybrid destruction versus systemic authority—exist on entirely non-intersecting axes, the YPS gap is less a measure of capability and more a reflection of their chosen operational scale. Yet, their alignment in Bonds reveals a shared subversion of the genre’s usual isolationist tropes; both characters reject the solitary god-complex common to isekai in favor of building dense social networks. While Anos uses his absolute Ego to enforce peace from the top down, Shiroe’s zero Ego forces him to catalyze change through bureaucratic consensus. Their comparison exposes the genre's latent divide between the hero as a force of nature and the hero as a societal engineer. Where Anos proves that power is most interesting when it is suppressed to prevent accidental apocalypse, Shiroe demonstrates that true power in an artificial world lies in the administrative capacity to make that world habitable for everyone else. In this sense, they are two sides of the same coin: the sovereign who can break the world, and the clerk who forces it to function.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.