[FOCI]

Early Access
You know one thing for certain: the only important element of a fight is who wins. How? Why? These questions are inconsequential. Thus, you’ll do anything to win a fight. Some might say you have no honor, no class, or some other foolish statement, but they’re missing the point. You come out on top in a battle—and that’s all that matters.
You bite, scratch, kick, and trip. You tangle foes in draperies, push them down stairs, and throw dirt in their eyes. You trick them into looking the wrong way, call them names, and say terrible things about their mothers.
Maybe you learned your methods while living on the streets, or maybe you barely survived a particularly horrific battle in a military campaign. Perhaps you simply have never bought into the idea of rules or honor when your life is on the line.
You’re likely to carry a few hidden tricks, sometimes literally up your sleeve. You might have a knife in your boot, a poisoned needle in your ring, a razor in the hem of your cloak, or a handful of stinging and itching powder in a hidden pocket. Your clothing probably has a lot of pockets, actually—more than a few of them well hidden.
troublemaker, loner (any genre)
You attempt to distract your foe (by getting them to look elsewhere, making a clumsy feint to set up your real strike, and so on) so you can follow up with an attack. Make an Intellect attack to deceive your foe; success means their defense against your melee attack this round is hindered. Because your foes catch on that you're tricky, each time after the first that you use this ability in a combat encounter, the Intellect attack is hindered by one step.
Instead of following up with an attack, you can follow up with some other action, and if you succeed at an eased bluffing task against them, they don't realize what you did. For example, you could distract a foe and then press the button that opens all of the lion cages, throw an incriminating object into a trash can, or even attempt to pickpocket them.
You attempt to injure your foe's eye, such as by gouging it or throwing dirt in their face. Make a hindered melee attack; success means their vision is impaired until you use a ten-minute or longer recovery, hindering their tasks that rely on sight (which is most tasks).
Your melee attack deals an additional 1 damage due to it including some combination of scratching, kicking, and/or biting.
While you have two or more moderate wounds or one major wound, you get a free reroll on one action each round (as if you had spent 1 XP).
If you attack a foe under one of the following conditions, your light melee or light ranged weapon attack inflicts an additional 5 damage on a successful hit. (This ability doesn't work with medium or heavy weapons.)
There's always a risk that someone you deal with will try to turn on you. After successfully persuading, deceiving, interacting positively with, or successfully using Fast Talk or a similar ability on a creature, if they become hostile to you within a day or so, you automatically reduce the wound severity of their first successful attack against you by one step.
At tier 3, instead of reducing the wound's severity, you ignore it completely (no damage).
When you hit with a melee or ranged attack, you deal an additional 4 damage. You can't use this ability in two consecutive rounds.
Whenever an ability grants a choice between two Pools, each time you use that ability you can decide which of those two Pools to spend your points from. You can't split the cost between both Pools.
Your successful attack also briefly incapacitates the target. Until you use a ten-minute or longer recovery (or until someone uses an action to give them aid), they are prone, unable to stand or crawl more than an immediate distance each round, and their defenses are hindered.
If you use one action creating a misdirection or diversion, in the next round you can take advantage of your opponent's lowered defenses. Make a melee attack roll against that opponent. You gain an asset on this attack. If your attack is successful, it inflicts an additional 4 damage.
You use lies and trickery, mockery, and perhaps even hateful, obscene language against a foe that can understand you. If you succeed, the foe is confused, enraged, or otherwise distracted enough that they lose their next turn, and on the turn thereafter, their tasks are hindered.
Make a hindered melee attack against a foe of level 3 or lower. If the attack hits, instead of inflicting damage you knock them unconscious until you use a ten-minute or longer recovery (or someone uses an action to bring them back around).
Effort: Increase the maximum level of the foe you can affect by 1.
You can use the environment to your advantage. If there is something within immediate distance that plausibly could provide cover (a table, chandelier, banister, second foe, and so on), you have cover and an asset on your melee attacks. It is a routine task (no roll required) for you to move anywhere that it is physically possible for you to reach as part of normal movement, climbing, or jumping, and you ignore obstacles and difficult terrain when you do so.
For example, you could climb up a tapestry to a balcony or slide down a ship's sail, but not slip through an arrow slit or enter a locked cage. This ability lasts until you use a ten-minute or longer recovery.
With a swift and sudden melee or ranged weapon attack, you strike a foe in a vital spot. If you hit, you inflict an additional 7 damage.
If you've hit a foe with a melee weapon in this combat, you automatically hit them again with that same weapon (no roll required), dealing normal damage. You can't use this ability with a special attack or if you want to use Effort to increase damage, but abilities that automatically affect your damage do apply to this attack.
GM Intrusions: People look poorly upon those who cheat or fight without honor. Sometimes a dirty trick backfires.