The mere thought that she might rid the world of Warriors who only cared about two skills in their entire skill tree was enough to send the Blue Dragon into blissful daydreams.
It was a lifelong ambition of her branch of the clergy.
Karl worked on another copy of [Golem Duplication] for Dana to use, and then passed it to Rae, with a promise to make her one to sell once he had a bit of spare time. First, he had plans to recruit Blue Dragons to the Library.
"What if I made a collection of Skill Books that are likely to cause advanced classes? You could bring in Librarians to make copies, and then the Blue Dragon Clergy could start an initiative to advance as many warriors as possible.
You could even do it out of Zilaz, where there are so many more warriors with excess resources." Karl suggested.
Sapphire smirked at him. "You’re not even trying to pretend that this isn’t an attempt to claim more dragons for the Darklight Host."
Karl shrugged. "Sometimes it’s fun to play along, sometimes it’s just easier to make sure everyone understands.
How do Silver Dragons feel about new spells and skills?"
Both dragons roared with laughter.
"Even more strongly than the Librarians do. The Blue Dragons want to know, and want the hard copy. Silver dragons wish to know the spell, and then they intend to use it." Sapphire agreed.
"So, we need Silver Dragons here as well. That would be a good combination. We could make another Dungeon team, for them to test out and practice new skills to see what will trigger class advancements." Karl suggested.
He could see the possibilities running through Sapphire’s mind, then the very moment that a brilliant plan came to her.
"You know... there is no actual rule against asking the Acolytes to join a study. They just need to meet the requirements to advance, right? We could grab all those warriors that the Red Dragons keep around and train as guards for merchants and such.
They are already being trained by the clergy, so there is no harm in making them into something more useful than a basic warrior template." She suggested.
Matron Blackclaw looked vaguely offended. The mercenary guards that the Red Dragon Clerics trained were chosen from the finest fighters among the Orphans, and the Red Dragons did not appreciate others calling them useless.
But Sapphire was already making plans, and wondering if she should call home to the Sholaha and Kopji region temples to gather volunteers.
Between the two nations, there should be at least ten thousand warriors in training at any given time. Even a one percent volunteer rate would give them statistically significant data.
The only issue was that they needed them all to be the same Ranks so that they could send healers with them into test dungeons and properly vet the results.
Karl tried not to laugh as the pair slagged the Warriors. Their ideas were helping him plan what he could do to reduce the number of basic warriors, though.
It might only take a single skill for another class that was just compatible enough with them that they would push through on a new path. The new class might not be ultra-rare or powerful, but it should be a step up from the basic classes that were most common.
For example, the whole group of specialty Rogues that they had doing Runecrafting in Zilaz. They had different skills than regular Rogues, and if the base class could create their own solid weapons from nothing, they would gain a distinct advantage with the skills they already had.
At least, situationally.
So, the next thing that Karl needed to do was to either burn some skill points getting random books, or start combining the basic abilities of everyone until he got new skills he could teach warriors.
If he gave them a beast space, it would most likely make them beast Rangers, or something similar to it. But if he gave them a combination of Mental Fortitude and an attack spell, they should be able to become a Battle Mage of some sort.
If they were bright enough.
Not all warriors were stupid. But all mages had to be at least moderately intelligent.
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