Recently, astronomically important silaisocyanoacetylene (HCCNSi) possessing a large dipole moment has been detected for the first time with the help of crossed molecular beam experiments. Quantum chemical computations at higher levels of theory have also been performed to characterize the transient species. In this study, we have analyzed the equilibrium geometry, stability, reactivity, and energetics as well as the nature of bonding in the noble gas (Ng) inserted HCCNSi compound. We have also considered its F analogue to understand the influence of the most electronegative atom in the compound. Metastable behavior of the XNgNSi compounds (X = HCC, F; Ng = Kr-Rn) is examined by calculating thermochemical parameters like free energy change (ΔG) and zero-point-energy-corrected dissociation energy (D0) at 298 K for all possible two-body (2B) and three-body (3B) (both neutral as well as ionic) dissociation channels using coupled-cluster theory [CCSD(T)] in addition to density functional theory (DFT) as well as second order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2). The set of predicted compounds is found to be endergonic in nature, having high positive free energy change suggesting the thermochemical stability of the compounds except for the 2B Ng-release paths. Though thermodynamically feasible, they are kinetically protected with very high activation free energy barriers. Interestingly, the release of Ng from the parent moiety XNgNSi produces the XSiN isomer, by 180° flipping of the NSi moiety. This can also be seen in the dynamical simulation carried out with the help of atom-centered density matrix propagation (ADMP) technique at 2000K for 1 ps. The bonding in Ng-C, Ng-F, and Ng-N bonds of the studied compounds is analyzed and described with the aid of natural bond orbital (NBO), topological parameters computed using atoms-in-molecules theory (AIM), energy decomposition analysis (EDA), and adaptive natural density partitioning (AdNDP) methods. The natural charge distribution on the constituent atoms suggests that the compounds can be partitioned into both ways of representations, viz., neutral radical as well as ionic fragments. Lastly, the reactivity of the compounds is scrutinized using certain reactivity descriptors calculated within the domain of conceptual density functional theory (CDFT).