Dean's strategy of diverting trouble to the east had an effect beyond his imagination.
After receiving the hint, Crab Erha directly changed the target of his quarrels. He followed the brothers and sisters all day long, trying to attract their attention. He was so busy that he had no time to be naughty, but he freed his original guardian Kana. It made Kana feel a little uncomfortable.
Throughout the afternoon, I followed him secretly to check on Crab Erha.
Dean, who knew the inside story, could sit still better than it could. He waited until the work at hand was finished, then came to the living room to meet the two apprentices.
When he arrived, Lucy and Ronan were looking through their notebooks on the table and chairs, and they wrote down many questions on the paper at hand.
The sound of Dean's footsteps coming downstairs quickly attracted the attention of the two children. Lucy raised the two notebooks in her hands and asked: "Teacher, when we checked the magic pet illustrated book, we found that Crab Erha is B-level. It is a familiar, but the number of skills it possesses is almost the same as that of the Shadow Doll. Does this mean that, like Kana, it is a...mutated individual?"
Dean glanced at the notes in her hand and determined based on the cover that this was the note that recorded the criteria for judging the level of familiars that he had summarized.
"Of course, its skill system has exceeded the limit that a B-level magic pet can master, so like Kana, it should be classified as a special individual."
Dean walked across from the two children and nodded in approval.
In his summary, the talent of the familiar comes from the paternal map and the maternal map, and is in a complementary relationship with the skills. The skill tree is based on the talent and is determined by the talent.
Therefore, F-level familiars have one and only one skill.
There are two E-level familiars.
There are three D classes.
C level has about four to five skills.
As for the B-level races further up, it is a threshold. Demon pets that cross this threshold have a complete set of skill systems. For example, Chef Crab, represented by Crab Erha, has attacks such as [Crab Roe Shock Wave]. Type skills, auxiliary skills represented by [Crab Roe Bun], and defensive skills represented by [Crab Shell Defense].
This is a skill that can be used by all members of their race. As long as you are a crab chef, even if you do nothing and just survive, you will gradually learn these skills.
So for this skill, Dean summarized it as [universal skill].
As for the A-level race, the skill system is richer than that of the B-level race, and it has the possibility of giving birth to special skills. For example, the two shadow dolls that Dean selected and bred before have special skills. This is a skill that ordinary Shadow Dolls cannot learn naturally through growth. Dean calls it [Expert Skill].
A level above A level is S level. Currently, Dean has not bred an S level race, so he doesn’t know what this level of race is like. He can only simply judge S level monsters through Kana. The special thing about pets is their ability to grow.
B-level familiars and A-level familiars are both fixed in a skill framework. No matter how much development is done, they cannot break away from this basic framework. However, S-level familiars have the potential to break this framework.
For example, Kana has developed its own series of special balloon skills by virtue of its [Shadow Explosion] talent.
And this kind of skill based on special talent is what Dean calls [exclusive skill].
That is, a skill that only Kana can use.
As for the SS and SSS levels further up, he couldn't even touch the edges, so naturally he couldn't explore their special features.
So at present, Dean's impression of these two levels is that they must be very strong.
According to the relationship between talent and skills, since talent can be used as a criterion for judging the number of skills, correspondingly, skills can also be used as a criterion for judging talent.
Therefore, the notebook in Lucy's hand was born, which was also the first version of the level evaluation criteria summarized by Dean.