Pick an N for this class. N must be positive and cannot be greater than LVL.
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Pick another class you know. The class chosen cannot be Custom group, and must be a x1 multiplier class.
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This class does not benefit from "Min Level" in the current campaign. (Conjugator does not have this restriction; this is an important difference between Conjugator and Exponenter).
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The Hit Dice is *N the number of dice and *N the die size (e.g. 2d3 would become 4d6 at N=2).
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Your "CL" and "LVL" for abilities is equal to your level to the Nth power instead of your level. However, you get "Level:" abilities (and "picks") only up to your level as normal (it is *not* squared).
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Warriors: Your base number of attacks is based on your level ^N instead of your level. However, you cannot go beyond the bottom of the number of attacks chart.
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Spell casters: Read on the ML=(level ^N) line, but your max SL is based only on ML=(level). For example, a level 4 Exponenter (N=2) emulating a Mage2 reads on the ML=16 line, but has only 1st and 2nd level spells (the max SL that a normal Mage2 has).
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Priests: You turn undead using level ^N. GGL powers that are LVL based use level ^N, but you get Level: picks only up to your level.
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Rogues: You get rogue points as if you were LVL=(level ^N), but you read the rogue chart only down to your level (not squared).
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Psionicists: Your LVL in PSP calculations is your level ^N.
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DM Note: In certain cases a formula is given for a class ability which is actually meant to abbreviate a "stack" of Level: abilities, such as "+LVL GGL picks". In these cases, the DM may rule you do not square that LVL number, you just use level. The ruling here is somewhat dependent on what else the class does, if the class gets almost no other benefits from Conjugator, the DM is more likely to let you use level squared. A good example of this is Pet Mage, which *does* use level squared for number of familiars, because otherwise a Conjugated Pet Mage does almost nothing extra.
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