| d36 | Result |
|---|---|
1 |
The recruit has a visible, extreme emotional breakdown upon making contact with the Agent. |
2 |
The recruit reveals their motive is based on a psychotic delusion or suicidal urge. |
3 |
The recruit develops intense paranoia about the Agent's identity mid-negotiation. |
4 |
The recruit freezes during the low-stakes initial task, risking their own capture. |
5 |
The recruit suffers a massive guilt attack over betraying their family/country, becoming uncontrollable. |
6 |
The recruit suffers a psychotic break and refuses to leave the country when instructed. |
7 |
The recruit demands an utterly unacceptable ideological guarantee or concession. |
8 |
The recruit's motive is pure greed, and they reject the Agency’s meagre initial payment offer. |
9 |
The recruit refuses to perform the critical compromising task (e.g., stealing a document) needed to cement the deal. |
10 |
The recruit insists on modifying the task to serve their own ideological goal (e.g., making it public immediately). |
11 |
The recruit demands that the Agent personally assassinate a specific political figure as a guarantee of safety. |
12 |
The recruit demands to bring excessive, contraband baggage (e.g., politically sensitive family photos or research). |
13 |
A former colleague or friend of the recruit insists on joining the table uninvited. |
14 |
The recruit's handler/friend/spouse is shadowing them, checking their loyalty. |
15 |
A rival agency's agent approaches the recruit simultaneously at the negotiation site. |
16 |
The mark of the first task is unexpectedly accompanied by a hostile security detail. |
17 |
The recruit's family member is hospitalised or gets into legal trouble, demanding immediate attention. |
18 |
A general security crackdown in the city forces a dangerous, unplanned route change. |
19 |
The meet-up location is compromised by an unusual number of plainclothes police watching the area. |
20 |
The Agent spots evidence of a local service's surveillance (e.g., a wire/bug) in the asset's belongings. |
21 |
The safehouse used for negotiations is found to have been recently entered and cleared of its contents. |
22 |
The security system for the target location has been silently upgraded since the last survey was performed. |
23 |
The recruit is visibly and obviously followed by the local security service from their home. |
24 |
The escape route requires traversing an area with active military or border patrol drills underway. |
25 |
The recruit shouts the full password in a moment of panic, instead of the agreed-upon fraction. |
26 |
The recruit reveals that they have already spoken to another Service about their defection. |
27 |
The recruit demands an unrealistic, classified safe location known only to high-level officials. |
28 |
The recruit attempts to document their actions (via photo/note) as leverage against the Agent. |
29 |
The recruit confesses everything to a priest or friend shortly before the next meeting. |
30 |
The recruit is found to be carrying unauthorised, deeply compromising materials in their luggage. |
31 |
The Agent's recognition signal (e.g., newspaper/flower) is mistakenly repeated by an innocent bystander. |
32 |
A critical identification document provided by the asset is found to be forged (by the asset, not the Agency). |
33 |
The escape vehicle fails to arrive at the scheduled time, stranding the group in the open. |
34 |
A sudden, inexplicable blackout or power failure prevents the task's completion. |
35 |
The Agent misplaces the emergency communication device meant for the asset during the handoff. |
36 |
The Agent realises the asset lacks the necessary language skills or cover ID knowledge for the transit country. |