He was coming to the Adventurer's Guild with Fell and Suey following yesterday.
Thinking it would be crowded in the morning hours, I arrive at the reception softly after coming a little out of time.
"Um, I'd like to ask you something."
"Yes, what is it?
"You know, I'm G-ranked now, what can I do to get up to F-rank?
Oh, now I feel surprised for a moment by the receptionist, but he gave me a proper explanation.
I can't complain because I do feel it now.
"You need to make a successful quest to get a certain number of points in order to increase your rank. In addition, there are exams if they rise above the C-rank."
Well, that means you can increase your rank by getting a certain number of points.
So, if it rises above the C-rank, do you mean you pass the points + exam?
You're okay there because you're not thinking about getting more than C-rank.
"I see you need to get certain points. How many points will I need if I go up from G-rank to F-rank?
"You need 100 points to get from G-rank to F-rank."
I don't even know if it's a hundred points, more or less.
"There are only a few requests that you can get a G-rank for, and most requests are for one or two points, even if there are three. That's why it's so hard to get from G-rank to F-rank."
Yes, the receptionist told me.
In the first place, the G-rank is equivalent to the training period until the adventurer becomes an adventurer, and he learns a lot about the adventurer while doing his request during the G-rank.
In the meantime, those who are not suited to adventurers will fall off naturally, and those who seek to make adventurers their livelihoods (or careers) will learn a lot during that period.
Sometimes it seems that the necessary points for going up from G to F are set high.
I see, did that mean something?
When I signed up for an adventurer, I didn't even know that.
Well, I just re-registered this time, and I'm not trying to make the adventurer a raw (impersonator), but do you want to go up to the F-ranks, so good luck.
"Ah, it takes three months for an early person to go up from G-rank to F-rank, and usually about six months. Good luck, Master Mukoda."
Yeh? Well, is it going to take that long?
Me, I didn't really check around there because I thought adventurers weren't my galas, and I didn't even know it, but adventurers could have licked it...
I don't know, even the earliest three months, I'm determined to take more.
Isn't it a long-term decision to stay in this city?
It's going to take that long to get from G-rank to F-rank, and he's going to fall off that unsuitable guy.
Convinced by the receptionist's explanation.
I guess it also means a period of discernment as to whether it is suitable for adventurers on its own.
Well, when I say adventurer, it's a life-threatening job.
Oh, I can't hang it, though.
When you get to the F-rank, we'll try to maintain the F-rank later.
Sure.
But the G-rank cancellation period is a month, and it takes so long to reach the F-rank, and G-rank adventurers don't have time to ask to go away.
I asked the receptionist that and she laughed.
There is no request to go away to the G-rank in the first place, and unless there are special circumstances, the G-rank adventurer will not abandon going up to the F-rank and go away, etc.
So they say it's normal to do the request until you reach the F-rank in the city where you first signed up for the Adventurers Guild.
Oh, really?
I signed up and only collected herbs once, so I started my journey soon.
No, you can't.
The receptionist yesterday told me, "You have that sometimes because it's the shortest period of time," but maybe he cared.
As far as I'm concerned right now, it seems normal to make a request and earn points so you can go up to the F-rank unless you think it's not for adventurers or have special circumstances.
Ha, it's just something I didn't know.
I can't take care of the Adventurer Guild, and good luck here.
Go for it. That's an F-rank.