Arthur Leywin acts less like a simple hero and more like a destabilizing force within the established hierarchies of magic and power. In the beginning, the world is pretty rigid—your affinity, core stage, and bloodline more or less dictate your destiny. His regression, as the novel frames it, doesn't just give him a head start; it inserts an architectural blueprint from a lost era into a decaying system.
This means he doesn't just climb the ladder; he rebuilds the ladder itself. Teaching his family ancient techniques, introducing concepts like aether-core development, and directly challenging the authority of ancient clans and the Asuras reshapes the entire power structure. The hierarchy stops being a fixed pyramid and becomes something he's actively reforming, pulling his allies upward and forcing the old powers to adapt or be left behind. The novel’s world hierarchy bends around his presence, making his role feel less about personal conquest and more about systemic renovation.
It’s a slow, often painful process, but you can trace the ripple effects from his family’s living room all the way to the peak of Epheotus.