The boy Leopin was born with unnaturally high dexterity. From an early age, he used his dexterity to contribute to his peers in a variety of crafts. Leopin and his friends entered the Royal Pioneer Academy. However, during the āRitual of Ability Developmentā at the entrance ceremony, the status given to Leopin was disastrous.
āOccupation: Unemployed.ā
āAll statuses except dexterity remain at their initial values and do not grow.ā
āSkills are poor dexterity*.ā
Leopinās classmates exiled him because he had nothing to offer other than his dexterity. Leopin is placed in the āSpecial Training Classā, a class for failures. Leopin is left all alone. However, he realizes that the skill he has been given, āPoor Dexterity,ā has an unexpected performance. That isā¦
You can convert your dexterity status to any other status.
You can change your occupation to anyone you want.
The first thing Leopin did was to become a lumberjack. First, Leopin changed his job to āLumberjackā to get wood from the forest. He then became a carpenter and built the most magnificent house of all. He became an Appraiser to identify rare items, and a Battle Axe User to fight off students from other classes who tried to attack him. Become a Ranger to explore dungeons and a Ninja to get through traps with ease.
Leopin, alone (solo), had gained enough power to do everything.
As Leopin continues to be a warrior, he is adored by his childhood friend, a saint, and admired by a beautiful alchemist, and his activities become even more well known. On the other hand, the classmates who expelled Leopin regret their decision to do so when they witness Leopinās abilities.
Their home remains a shack, they are unable to explore, and they gradually lose their place in the school and are ruined.
*Explanation: the skill is not āpoor dexterityā, but ādexterous poorā, which is the Japanese equivalent to a Jack of all trades, master of none; since they can do a bit of everything, they are ādexterousā, but since they have mastered none, they supposedly cannot make a living from it, hence they are āpoorā.