Difference between revisions of "Ranking"

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== Ranks ==
 
== Ranks ==
  
# Harmless
+
* Harmless
# Mostly harmless
+
* Mostly harmless – 4 kills
# Dangerous
+
* Poor – 8 kills
# Deadly
+
* Below average – 16 kills
# Elite
+
* Average – 32 kills
 +
* Above Average – 64 kills
 +
* Competent – 128 kills
 +
* Dangerous – 1,000 kills
 +
* Deadly – 3,000 kills
 +
* Elite – 6,000 kills
  
 
== Explanation ==
 
== Explanation ==

Revision as of 20:43, 26 January 2016

A central aspect of both the various Elite games and the Elite universe is the Elite ranking system.

Ranks

  • Harmless –
  • Mostly harmless – 4 kills
  • Poor – 8 kills
  • Below average – 16 kills
  • Average – 32 kills
  • Above Average – 64 kills
  • Competent – 128 kills
  • Dangerous – 1,000 kills
  • Deadly – 3,000 kills
  • Elite – 6,000 kills

Explanation

Most traders could achieve a rank of Dangerous within about five years in space. Arguably, if a trader wanted the big profits, he wouldn’t last long unless he achieved a rating of that level. A great many pilots were Dangerous; it implied they were a seasoned space dog, ready for anything, though virtually all their kills would have been in self-defence.

Reaching the giddy height of Deadly required a lot more dedication. It meant apilot had deliberately sought out danger, witchspacing into difficult systems and facing down fierce opponents; perhaps even taking on covert military missions. Deadly implied a pilot was not just a trader, but a fighter as well; going on the offensive, taking big risks. Deadly was a rank associated with advanced skills, a rank that indicated you were cut out for bigger things, that you might be ‘Elite’ material. It indicated a single minded fixation on killing for killing’s sake, a hunter, someone apart from normal society.

Elite, of course, is something else altogether.

References