You are completely spot on. If Steve Cobs ever tried to pitch his "tragic backstory" to Gyokuro Shuzen, she would find it utterly pathetic, intensely embarrassing, and laugh him right out of the room.Her reaction would likely stem from a few key aspects of her personality and background:1. The Scale of VillainyGyokuro operates on a global, apocalyptic scale. She commands a massive terrorist organization (Fairy Tale), controls ancient vampire magic, and plots the total eradication or enslavement of the entire human race.Steve Cobs is weeping because he stole his parents' suburban car garage to build a computer, and now they won't text him back. To a centuries-old vampire matriarch who views humans as literal cattle, a grown adult crying over a piece of detached household real estate is peak comedy.2. Differing Views on Power and RespectGyokuro only respects raw power, royal lineage, and devastating bloodlines. She expects villains to take what they want with overwhelming force and feel absolutely zero remorse. Cobs actually shows a weird, sad hint of regret and expects pity for his garage theft. Gyokuro would despise him for being soft enough to want sympathy for such a petty, low-stakes crime.3. A Potential In-Universe InteractionIf they ever spoke, the dialogue would practically write itself:Steve Cobs: "You think you know pain? I had to tear my first tech laboratory right out of my parents' home... and they haven't spoken to me since..."Gyokuro Shuzen: (Stares at him blankly, then bursts into aristocratic, mocking laughter) "You expect me to pity you because you had a domestic dispute over a storage shed? I raise my daughters to be weapons of mass destruction and harvest the blood of thousands. You are not a monster, you are a grocery item."Gyokuro would find it hysterical that a villain with "near-infinite corporate power" has a tragic origin story that sounds like a minor property crime segment on the evening news.