Labyrinths & Liontaurs
Contents

Notes

Classes and Progression

There are 12 standard character classes defined in Labyrinths & Liontaurs. They are:

Barbarian: The barbarian directs rage into power, roaming far beyond the edge of civilized society, lands, or both.

Bard: The bard uses music, skill, and spell alike to bolster allies, confound enemies, and court fame and fortune.

Cleric: A devout follower of a deity, the cleric can heal wounds, raise the dead, and call down the wrath of the gods.

Druid: The druid is a worshiper of all things natural — a spellcaster, a friend to animals, and a skilled shapechanger.

Fighter: Brave and stalwart, the fighter is a master of all manner of arms and armor.

Monk: A student of martial arts, a monk uses discipline to forge flesh and bone into supernatural offense and defense.

Paladin: The paladin is the knight in shining armor, a devoted follower of law and good.

Ranger: A tracker and hunter, the ranger is a lover of the wild, tracking down favored foes.

Rogue: The rogue is a thief and a scout, an opportunist capable of delivering precise, powerful strikes against unwary foes.

Sorcerer: The spellcasting sorcerer is born with an innate knack for magic and has strange, eldritch powers.

Summoner: The summoner relies on both the spells granted by divinity and an alliance with outsiders who come willingly froƒm other planes to offer assistance.

Wizard: The wizard masters arcana through constant study to gain incredible magical power.

Experience Points and Character-Based Progression

As player characters overcome challenges, they gain experience points. As these points accumulate, PCs advance in level and power. The rate of this advancement depends on the type of game that your group wants to play. Some prefer a fast-paced game, where characters gain levels every few sessions, while others prefer a game where advancement occurs less frequently. In the end, it is up to your group to decide what rate fits you best. Characters advance in level according to the following table:

Table: Experience Points and Character-Based Powers
TierCharacter LevelExperience Point TotalTraitFeatRacial PowerAbility Score Boost
Tyro1st0Yes
2nd1,000Yes
3rd4,000Yes
4th9,000Yes
5th16,000Yes
Adventurer6th50,000Yes
7th72,000Yes
8th98,000Yes
9th128,000Yes
10th162,000Yes
Hero11th300,000Yes
12th363,000Yes
13th432,000Yes
14th507,000Yes
15th588,000Yes
Legend16th900,000Yes
17th1,024,000Yes
18th1,156,000Yes
19th1,296,000Yes
20th1,444,000Yes

Leveling Up: Class-Based Progression

Characters gain experience, typically by defeating enemies, solving problems, acting creatively, and role-playing their characters well. As soon as they earn enough experience points, they may advance in level. Typically, this occurs at the end of a game session, when your Game Master (GM) hands out that session's experience point awards.

Because L&L imposes experience point costs, especially for magic item attunement and uneven multiclassing, it is crucial that GMs award experience points on an individual basis. This personalized experience point total must be given to each player. The system fails if the GM makes an announcement such as "OK, everyone level up to level 7." That is unfair to players who have chosen to shepherded their experience points, careful to advance faster than those who use them for other purposes.

Also, individualized awards allow the GM to award experience points for exceptional play. A small or token sum nonetheless rewards an incredible joke, quick thinking, great roleplay, or even meta-activities that enhance the game, such as running a PC for a fellow player who can't stay for the entire session.

Some GMs, preferring a more realistic mode of play, only allow leveling up to take place in downtime, between adventures, when characters have time to train and possibly seek teachers or mentors. Other GMs prefer to reward characters more quickly, with less fuss, allowing leveling to "magically" take place mid-adventure, perhaps when characters sleep or rest. Leveling up consists of advancing in character-level-based ways and in class-level-based ways.

Gaining Character-Based Powers

Each time you level up, your character level increments by one, and you gain a power that does not depend on your class. The same pattern of gaining powers repeats for each Tier, as seen in the table above.

Decide on your character-based power before you move on to your class.

Gaining Class-Based Powers

After picking your character-based power, you select the class you will choose for this level. Every time you level up, you can choose to advance a class you already have or gain a level in a new one (see Multiclassing, below). Many players choose a single class and advance only in it over the course of their career.

When you gain a class level, you add to your base attack bonus, your saving throws, and your caster level. These usually advance as a fraction, and after you add to your current total, round remaining fractions down for the final value. Often, this will mean not advancing. For example, a barbarian 4 has a Fortitude saving throw of 3.00. At level 5, the barbarian adds 0.75, for a total of 3.75. That rounds down to a +3; in effect, the barbarian's Fort save does not advance at level 5. At level 6, add another 0.75, now totaling 4.50, rounding to +4. Note that single-classed characters do not need to track fractions; they can simply consult the table for their class. See below for special notes about advancing base attack bonus and caster level.

Also, when you gain a class level, you gain skill ranks equal to the amount granted by your class, plus your odd (column A) intelligence modifier. You may spend these ranks on any skill in the game, although the standard -4 non-proficiency penalty applies if you are not proficient with a skill. Also note that the maximum total ranks you can have in a skill is equal to your character level, if it is a class skill for you, or your character level -2, if it is not a class skill for you.

Finally, you gain a power based on your class:

For most classes, you have a choice of powers when you gain an interaction, a combat, or an exploration power. At levels 5, 10, 15, and 20, you can select one of those that you did not choose previously from that class. If there are none, then you must take a feat. At levels 1, 6, 11, and 16, you gain a signature ability for your class. Some signature abilities have prerequisites; if you do not have the prerequisite and you are multiclassing (see below), you may be able to take a signature ability from a lower tier in that class. If you cannot even do that, you would probably be advised to take a level in a different class, or retrain (see below) so that you meet the prerequisite.

Advancing Base Attack Bonus

As your base attack bonus (BAB) increases, in increments of +5, you gain additional attacks when you make a full attack. Each additional attack is at a -5 penalty, cumulative. At BAB +6, you gain an additional attack at +1. At BAB +11, you gain two additional attacks, at +6 and at +1. At BAB +16, you gain three additional attacks, at +11, +6, and +1. These additional attacks are also referred to as "iterative attacks." More information is available on the combat page.

Advancing Caster Level

As your caster level increases, in increments of +1, you gain the ability to cast an additional spell per day at the level equal to your new caster level. Your bonus spells per day, based on your casting ability, apply to this newest spell level. You also gain two new spells known, chosen from those available, as specified for each individual class. And you have the opportunity to forget a known spell, replacing it with another of the same level and kind. More information is available on the magic page.

Multiclassing

You may add levels in multiple classes as you progress in level, thus becoming a multiclass character. The class abilities from a character’s different classes combine to determine a multiclass character’s overall abilities. Multiclassing improves a character’s versatility at the expense of focus.

For base attack bonus, caster level, saving throw bonuses, hit points, and skill points, multiclassing is additive. You sum up the numbers of all the classes you possess. Do not round down fractions until after you have added all the values together.

When you add a level in a new class, the class ability you gain depends on your character level. The first time you add a class, you do not gain the level 1 class ability; instead, you gain the class ability that corresponds with your character level. This ensures that all characters gain a signature power at character levels 1, 6, 11, and 16; an interaction power at 2, 7, 12, and 17; and so on.

When you add a class ability that has a prerequisite you do not meet, you must choose the lower-tier ability that is a prerequisite to it. For example, a level 13 Rogue adds a level of Fighter at level 14. She has a choice of the Military Engineer or the Cavalry II ability. Since she does not have the prerequisite for the Cavalry II ability, her choice is actually Military Engineer or Cavalry I. Note that you can always take a lower tier signature ability even if you do not have to.

Multiclass characters follow the rules for learning spells noted for each class, with one addition: when you gain a caster level, you can add one or two first level spells from any class that contributes to your caster level. For example, a Bard 1 / Fighter 1 has a caster level 1 and has the choice of learning two inherent spells, two arcane spells (of those allowed to bards), or one of each.

Here's an extended example to walk through the process. A 5th-level fighter decides to dabble in the arcane arts, and adds one level of wizard when he advances to 6th level. Such a character would have the powers and abilities gained by taking five levels of fighter and a level of wizard, but would still be considered a 6th-level character. (His class levels would be 5th and 1st, but his total character level is 6th.) He keeps all of his class abilities gained from 5 levels of fighter, but now also gains the benefits of gaining a level of wizard:

Note that there are a number of effects and prerequisites that rely on a character's level or Hit Dice. Such effects are always based on the total number of levels or Hit Dice a character possesses (character level), not just those from one class (class level). The exception to this is class abilities -- while signature abilities always vary with character level, other class abilities generally vary with either class level or caster level.

Uneven Multiclassing A multiclass character incurs a 10% experience point penalty if their levels are not within one of each other. A Bard 4 / Cleric 4 has no penalty, nor does a Bard 3 / Cleric 4 nor a Bard 4 / Cleric 3. But if the classes are more uneven, with a difference of two or more levels, then the character suffers the 10 percent experience point penalty. A Fighter 5 / Wizard 1 incurs the penalty until reaching level 4 Wizard.

However, certain racial powers allow you to ignore the penalty for specific classes, called your "favored class." With the right racial power selection, the Fighter 10 / Wizard 1 is fine if he is a dwarf or human with fighter as his favored class, or an elf or human with wizard as his favored class. A Fighter 10 / Cleric 5 / Wizard 1 incurs the penalty regardless of favored class, if any.

Retraining

Labyrinths & Liontaurs can be a complicated game, offering many choices to players as they evolve their characters. In order to keep the game fun, do not penalize players for making choices they later regret. Rather, Game Masters should allow players to "retrain" their characters, even when such retraining suspends disbelief, such as making a change of race. If the players would enjoy it, feel free to roleplay the retraining, interacting with tutors, for example, or going through a learning "montage." Or simply make the changes between gaming sessions, and retcon the change so as not to disrupt the game.

That said, the intent of this retraining rule is to help those who make what turn out to be poor choices. It is reasonable to limit the number of these retrainings. For inexperienced players, it is reasonable to allow retrainings even as often as once per level. However, game masters should be wary of experienced power gamers who choose options at an earlier level with the intention of changing their build later to drop those options when they are no longer valuable. That's a violation of the spirit of the rule. For these veteran rules-expert players, at your discretion, allow a single free retraining, if they claim they made a mistake -- but for each subsequent retraining, consider a 1% of total xp fee for the change, doubling with each subsequent change. If fees like this inspire complaints, well, honestly, rules-savvy minimaxers are probably not players you really want in your game.

Note that some classes face restrictions, especially in alignment or conduct. If a player cannot play within the restrictions of a given class, the game master may require retraining, especially if the player violates restrictions repeatedly.