Goals & Results

How progress is recorded, how outcomes are formed, and what they actually show about your decisions.

How the journey works

The formats differ not only in difficulty, but also in what counts as a result. In some cases, the important thing is to understand the situation and see its structure. In others, it is to hold a clear direction. In others, it is to complete a stricter check without relying on trial and error. That is why the result is always tied to the task itself, rather than existing on its own.

Completion formats

Theory

A mode for understanding. It lets you change answers freely and see how they reshape the situation. There is no score here — only room for understanding.

Practice

A mode for training. The pattern of change remains visible, but without direct explanation. The focus shifts from being told to recognizing it for yourself.

Exam

A mode for recording the result. There is little room for trial and error; consistency and composure matter. The outcome reflects the quality of the run — either in the way you acted or in how accurately you held the direction.

Two types of outcome

Way of acting

In scenarios without a fixed goal, the outcome shows the overall pattern that emerges from your decisions taken together.

Breakdown

Risk
Skills
Time Cost

It helps reveal:

  • what you tend to rely on
  • what you try to preserve
  • where you create pressure
  • what you trade away in order to move forward

This is not a scored judgment, but a record of a consistent way of acting.

Precision of movement

In scenarios with a defined goal, the outcome shows how accurately you managed to hold the intended direction.

Alignment
Trust
Complexity
Time Cost
Risk

What matters here is:

  • where deviations appeared
  • what it cost to stay on course
  • how stable the decision turned out to be

This is no longer just observation, but a measurable difference between runs.

How to read the result

The result doesn't come down to "good" or "bad." It shows how the decision changed the situation:

  • where something was strengthened
  • where a cost appeared
  • where balance was either disrupted or maintained

The difference between modes lies only in how openly this picture is revealed.

What this gives you

Over time, you begin to see:

  • your recurring way of acting
  • where precision tends to break down
  • which decisions are stable and which are not

That is the main effect of the practice: not a one-off answer, but a gradually accumulating understanding.