This is where people normally get lost, so let's go back to
RuneScape gold our example. In the situation described above, we've finished flooring 1, 2, 3 and 4, but can not do floor 5. We don't want to repeat floors or so the XP will utilize a prestige figure of 0. Insteadwe"reset", which moves our current advancement (prestige) amount of 4 to our prior advancement (prestige) number. We'll finally have a current progress of 0 (since we just"reset" and are starting a new streak ) and a preceding advancement of 4 (out of when we reset).
We could go back and do floor 1 . When we finish it, the game will see that we've got a present advancement of 1 (from finishing flooring 1 in this series ) but a previous progress of 4. This guarantees that we're rewarded for having done 4 floors in a row without repeating any.
How Prestige Changes XP Allowed for Floors. The prestige system ensures that when you reset progress and go back to earlier floors, you get more XP than you did the first time you completed them, but significantly less than you may when you repeat the deeper floors. As an instance, if my prior advancement (prestige) is 9 when I reset, then once I return to do floor 1 that the XP will be contingent upon averaging 9 and 1. While I do flooring 2, it is going to be averaging 9 and two, and so on. I will get the maximum foundation XP when I work my way down to floor 9, where I will be averaging 9 and 9. In general this works out to about 25 percent less XP than if the game allow you to repeat your deepest level without a prestige penalty.
It follows that, all else being equal, I will get as much XP doing flooring 1 with a prestige of 9 because I did the first time I did floor 5 with a prestige (current advancement ) of 5.
In the same way, there is rarely any reason to ever redo a floor and choose the"zero prestige" penalty. If you consider it, you're always better off to save progress and start over at floor 1, because averaging a 1 from
cheap OSRS gold ground 1 having a high prestige figure is better than averaging a top floor amount with a prestige of zero.
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