Advancement

Throughout a campaign, characters will advance. They will gain or improve skills, acquire new exploits, and increase attributes. Characters have two 'currencies' to spend on advancement.

Time. A character can take a new career grade by spending the required time (usually 1d6 years, but the career itself will provide specific information). This type of advancement requires downtime – periods in which a character's activities take place in the background - and it advances a character's age. If time is spent, no XP expenditure is needed.

Characters can always spend more than the minimum time indicated - the indicated time is an optimum adventurer hero progression.

Additionally, NPCs may take much longer to progress; it is not unusual to see old NPCs with only a few career ranks.

Experience points. The GM awards experience points (XP) for overcoming challenges, defeating enemies, and completing milestones. These XP can be spent on new career grades. The XP cost of a career grade is equal to 10 times the new grade – deduct the XP from the character's total when he spends them. If XP are spent, no time expenditure is needed.

Advancements are accessed via career grades, and contextualize any given improvement.

Defeating Enemies & Overcoming Challenges

The core advancement assumption is that you need to defeat or overcome 10 encounters of Medium difficulty to advance to the next grade. The XP requirement for each grade is equal to ten times the next grade. For a Medium difficulty encounter, characters gain XP equal to their own grade.

The GM evaluates how difficult the players found the encounter and awards XP accordingly. Round down when calculating half grade values.

Difficulty Slow Fast

Trivial 0 No XP

Easy 2 Half grade (round down)

Medium 5 Equal to grade

Hard 10 Two times grade

Extremely hard 15 Three times grade

GMs are free to set different advancement rates. Changing the speed of character advancement can affect the tone of a campaign, and the GM should be sure to inform the players before play what the campaign's advancement rate is. To set a different advancement rate, simply increase or decrease the cost of a new career grade from 10 XP per grade to a higher or lower value.

Planning

If the PCs research and plan to the extent where they make a supposedly difficult encounter into easier encounter by virtue of their preparations and forethought, they are awarded XP for an encounter level higher (e.g. an encounter which turned out to be Easy because of good planning becomes a Medium encounter for the purposes of XP awards). XP awards for good planning require GM discretion, and ensures that players are not penalized for thinking their way around a problem.

Completing Milestones

The GM awards XP for completing major storyline milestones. Milestones are major non-combat challenges or obstacles which have required substantial effort on the part of the characters. This award is equal to the character's existing grade (the same as for a Medium encounter). A grade 5 character, therefore, receives 5 XP for completing a milestone. Milestones are fairly arbitrary, but a good guideline is to include one in every session of play.

Incremental Advances

Sometimes a character increases just her STR attribute by working out, or just her pistols skill at the shooting range. To do this, the character needs to spend XP. The cost of the increase is equal to three times the new score – so an increase from 9 to 10 STR costs 30 XP, while an increase from rank 2 to rank 3 in pistols costs 9 XP. The XP is deducted from the character's total XP.

A universal exploit (but not a career exploit) can be purchased for half the price of a new grade.

You cannot spend time to make incremental advances; you must spend XP. Only full career grades can be purchased with time. Incremental advances take place in the background at the same time as regular activity, and are assumed to have involved current and prior training. Therefore a character gains the benefit of an incremental advance immediately upon spending the XP.

Incremental advances are not as cost effective as career grades, but they allow for fine-tuning and granular advancement. Note, however, that a character's maximum dice pool is always based on his overall grade, so incremental advancements should always be viewed as a supplementary advancement method.