The comparison of these two characters exposes a fundamental tension within the isekai genre: the value of intentionality. Both Cid and Matthias achieve positions of immense power—Cid at a city level, Matthias threatening national stability—and both operate with a distinct lack of moral compromise, scoring identically on Darkness. However, the source of their influence diverges sharply. Matthias’s power is a direct consequence of deliberate, calculated effort; every advancement is a step towards a pre-defined goal, a restoration of lost knowledge. He *wants* to be strong, and his arc is defined by achieving that strength through rigorous application. Cid, conversely, is powerful precisely because he doesn’t want anything at all. His ‘eminence in shadow’ is a self-contained fantasy, a performance enacted for an audience of one—himself. The story’s brilliance lies in how the world *imposes* meaning onto his meaningless gestures. While Matthias’s Bonds score reflects genuine connection forged through shared intellectual pursuits, Cid’s are born from misinterpretation; his followers build a religion around his cosplay. This isn’t a matter of Ego, where Matthias scores a near-zero due to his lack of self-regard, but of Luck. Cid’s narrative protection isn’t about avoiding death, but about ensuring his delusions are consistently validated, transforming accidental brilliance into strategic advantage. The contrast reveals that power in isekai isn’t solely about capability, but about how the world chooses to read the protagonist’s intent—or lack thereof.
Archetype breakdowns and dispute court land in later phases.