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nexusframe:characters:level

Level

In The Nexus Framework, Level is a broad measure of a character’s overall capability, representing accumulated experience, learning, and personal growth. It serves as a pacing tool for campaigns built with the Framework, helping designers and Game Masters define how quickly characters gain access to more powerful abilities, higher-tier traits, and more demanding challenges.

At its core, Level exists to mark stages of advancement—whether that means unlocking new Tiers of Traits, improving attributes, or broadening a character’s influence in the world.

The Level Table

As characters adventure and gain experience, they grow in skill, talent, and influence. Each new level represents both the lessons learned and the personal growth achieved along the way. Leveling up is a steady process rather than a sudden leap; each stage brings new opportunities to refine existing abilities or discover new ones.

Level Experience Points Notes
1 0–149 Character Creation
2 150–349 +1 to all trained Skills
3 350–599 Skill Trait
4 600–899 Ancestry Trait
5 900–1249 Skill Trait
6 1250–1649 Ancestry Trait
7 1650–2099 Skill Trait
8 2100–2599 +1 to all trained Skills
9 2600–3149 Skill Trait
10 3150–3749 Ancestry Trait
11 3750–4399 Skill Trait
12 4400–5099 Ancestry Trait
13 5100–5849 Skill Trait
14 5850–6649 +1 to all trained Skills
15 6650–7499 Skill Trait
16 7500+ Mandatory character retirement

Improving Attributes

Every time a character gains a level, they may distribute six points as they please among their attribute values. No single attribute may receive more than four points.

Improving Health and Stamina

Every time a character gains a level, they may add two points to both their maximum health and their maximum stamina.

Gaining Traits

Whenever a character goes up a level, they will select and add one General Trait to their character. Alternately, they may select a trait from any Specialist pool to which they have access, including the Combat Trait pool.

At every odd-numbered level, the character also gain a a Skill Trait. And at levels 4, 6, 10 and 12, they also gain an Ancestry trait.

A character can only select a trait within or below their tier. At character creation, characters are Initiate-tier. At levels 2 through 7, they are Adept-tier. At levels 8 through 13, they are Master tier. And at levels 14 and 15, they are Paragon tier. Each pool of traits is split into tiers, and includes a mention of the minimum levels required.

Experience Points

Experience Points (XP) represent a character’s accumulated growth through adventure, challenge, and personal development. Characters earn XP for overcoming obstacles, achieving goals, and meaningful roleplay. When enough XP has been gained, the character advances to the next Level.

Each game built with The Nexus Framework determines its own rate of XP gain and the amount required for advancement, allowing designers to tailor progression speed to the tone and style of their setting. However, to make the game designer's life easier, presented below are three systems that can serve as a basis to judge your own system.

Option 1: Time-Based Experience

It's assumed that during an adventure, your character will be contributing in a meaningful way all during the adventure—even if you are not directly acting in a scene, your character is probably still doing something helpful.

This is the simplest system available: At the end of each session, award each character 10 XP for every hour the session lasted. You can decide how you want to measure partial hours.

Design Notes: This method works best for story-driven or open-ended campaigns, where consistent participation matters more than tallying specific encounters or objectives.

Option 2: Narrative Weight

This system breaks the awarding of XP into two steps. The first is referred to as the base value, and is set based on the conditions of the adventure. The base value starts at zero, and will range from zero to ten.

Level of Threat

  • If the party faced no real opposition in the adventure, don't increase the base value.
  • If the party outclassed their opposition—but not so much as to render the opposition meaningless—increase the base value by one.
  • If the party and the opposition were approximately equal, increase the base value by two.
  • If the opposition was measurably superior to the party, increase the base value by three.

Area of Influence

  • If the adventure affected only the party—or not even the party—don't increase the base value.
  • If the adventure affected a small group—such as a company, village, or band of travellers—increase the base value by one.
  • If the adventure affected a moderate group—such as a large corporation, a town, or a medieval city—increase the base value by two.
  • If the adventure affected a large group—such as a kingdom, a modern metropolis, or a rural state or small country—increase the base value by three.
  • If the adventure affected every person that the party is likely to encounter in their life, increase the base value by four.

Potential Loss

  • If the party faces no real losses as a result of the adventure, don't increase the base value.
  • If the party faces temporary non-fatal losses—such as the loss of wealth or property—increase the base value by one.
  • If the party faces permanent non-fatal losses—such as the death or alienation of a significant ally, the destruction of a safe haven, or the permanent loss of access to a major resource—increase the base value by two.
  • If the party's lives are on the line, increase the base value by three.

Award Conditions

At the end of the session, consider each of the following conditions *for each character*, and award an amount of XP equal to the base value for each condition met.

  • If the character actively participated, award them one base value.
  • If the character worked as part of the team, award them one base value.
  • If the player at least attempted to portray their character, award them one base value.
  • If the player solved a major problem or was involved in a combat, award them one base value.
  • If the player added to the lore of the game world during play, award them one base value.

For the party as a whole, consider the two following points:

  • If a story arc ended, award each character one base value.
  • If the story arc ended in a victory for the party, award each character one additional base value.

With this system, a character might gain as much as 70 XP in a single session, but is more likely to earn 20 to 30.

Design Notes: This system emphasizes story impact and character involvement over raw combat or time spent playing. It works best in campaigns with a strong narrative focus, where success, loss, and personal growth carry as much weight as tactical victories.

Option 3: Encounter-based XP

With this system, each creature, hazard or skill challenge that the party must deal with carries its own XP award. The amount of the award depends on the difficulty of the encounter, as described in the table below.

Difficulty Trivial Easy Average Challenging Difficult Deadly
XP Award 2 5 10 15 20 30 50

Design Notes: This method provides fine-grained control and a strong sense of measurable progress. It works best for groups that prefer tactical or challenge-driven play, where each encounter represents a meaningful obstacle. However, it may require more bookkeeping than time-based or narrative systems.

nexusframe/characters/level.txt · Last modified: by 127.0.0.1