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PrCs: Anathema, or just lack of interest? (Pick two!)
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<blockquote data-quote="Yaarel" data-source="post: 7800589" data-attributes="member: 58172"><p>Instead of the term ‘prestige’, it might be more useful to link it by tier.</p><p></p><p>• Levels 1-4: Basic class.</p><p>• Levels 5-8: Expert class.</p><p>• Levels 9-12: Master class.</p><p>• Levels 13-16: Leader class.</p><p>• Levels 17-20: Legend class.</p><p></p><p>(Levels 21+: Epic class).</p><p></p><p>Hypothetically, for the sake of an example. A Vampire miniclass might only have levels for the Expert tier and the Master tier. Any basic vampires might be ineffectual drones, perhaps even perpetually Charmed, while only higher level vampires become autonomous and powerful. The expert miniclass would supply the more potent Vampire abilities, while the master miniclass would supply the high-level Dracula-esque abilities.</p><p></p><p>The Shadowdancer might be a basic miniclass, with the essentials of shadow magic that any character can take at low levels.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Note, the master tier is when the character becomes the head of some institution: a guild, wizard tower, military fortress, or so on. The leader tier is when they become movers-and-shakers within national politics. The legend tier is when they impact the affairs of the world or plane.</p><p></p><p>It makes sense if certain miniclasses are pertinent to these specific magnitudes of political influence.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Yaarel, post: 7800589, member: 58172"] Instead of the term ‘prestige’, it might be more useful to link it by tier. • Levels 1-4: Basic class. • Levels 5-8: Expert class. • Levels 9-12: Master class. • Levels 13-16: Leader class. • Levels 17-20: Legend class. (Levels 21+: Epic class). Hypothetically, for the sake of an example. A Vampire miniclass might only have levels for the Expert tier and the Master tier. Any basic vampires might be ineffectual drones, perhaps even perpetually Charmed, while only higher level vampires become autonomous and powerful. The expert miniclass would supply the more potent Vampire abilities, while the master miniclass would supply the high-level Dracula-esque abilities. The Shadowdancer might be a basic miniclass, with the essentials of shadow magic that any character can take at low levels. Note, the master tier is when the character becomes the head of some institution: a guild, wizard tower, military fortress, or so on. The leader tier is when they become movers-and-shakers within national politics. The legend tier is when they impact the affairs of the world or plane. It makes sense if certain miniclasses are pertinent to these specific magnitudes of political influence. [/QUOTE]
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