
Most professional platforms let you claim your skills. TCTF lets you prove them. Our achievement and ranking system is built on real contributions, verified collaborations, and actual project outcomes — not vanity metrics or fake endorsements.
On most professional platforms, skills are self-reported. You type 'React' into a text field, and suddenly you are a React expert. Someone you barely worked with clicks 'Endorse,' and your profile gains credibility it did not earn. The entire system is built on claims, not evidence. TCTF takes a fundamentally different approach. Every achievement in our system is earned through real activity — code contributions, project completions, peer collaborations, and community participation. You cannot buy your way to a higher rank. You cannot ask a friend to inflate your profile. The system watches what you do, verifies it, and rewards you accordingly.

TCTF's ranking system has seven distinct tiers: Newcomer, Contributor, Builder, Expert, Master, Grandmaster, and Legend. Each tier represents a meaningful threshold of verified activity across the platform. Newcomer is where everyone starts — it requires nothing more than creating an account and completing your profile. Contributor is earned by making your first verified contributions: a merged pull request, a completed project milestone, or meaningful community participation.
Builder represents consistent, sustained contribution over time. You cannot reach Builder in a weekend sprint — it requires weeks of genuine activity across multiple dimensions. Expert is where specialization begins to matter. The system recognizes depth in specific areas: frontend architecture, API design, DevOps automation, or community leadership. Master and Grandmaster represent the top percentiles of the platform — professionals whose contributions have measurably impacted projects, mentored other members, and advanced the community.
Legend is deliberately rare. It represents sustained excellence over months or years, combined with community impact that extends beyond individual projects. Legend status is not a destination — it is a recognition that your work has shaped how others work.
Each tier transition requires meeting thresholds across multiple categories simultaneously. You cannot game your way to Expert by spamming pull requests in a single repository. The system requires breadth and depth, consistency and quality, individual excellence and collaborative impact.
🏆Seven tiers from Newcomer to Legend. Each transition requires verified activity across multiple categories — you cannot game your way up with a single type of contribution.

Achievements are organized into six categories that together paint a complete picture of a professional's capabilities: Code Contributions, Project Delivery, Community Participation, Peer Collaboration, Knowledge Sharing, and Mentorship.
Code Contributions tracks merged pull requests, code reviews performed, issues resolved, and the quality metrics of submitted code. It is not just about volume — a single well-architected contribution that solves a complex problem earns more than dozens of trivial fixes. Project Delivery measures completed milestones, on-time delivery rates, and client satisfaction scores from escrow-protected projects on Cometbid Social.
Community Participation captures forum engagement, event attendance, working group membership, and governance participation within TCTF. Peer Collaboration measures how effectively you work with others — joint projects completed, code review quality ratings from peers, and conflict resolution outcomes. Knowledge Sharing tracks documentation written, tutorials published, and educational content that helps other members grow.
Mentorship is the highest-signal category. It measures your direct impact on other members' growth — mentees who advanced in rank, projects where your guidance led to successful delivery, and community members who credit your support in their progression. Mentorship achievements cannot be self-claimed. They are triggered only when the mentee's outcomes validate the mentorship relationship.
📊Six categories: Code Contributions, Project Delivery, Community Participation, Peer Collaboration, Knowledge Sharing, and Mentorship. Together they measure the complete professional — not just what you build, but how you build it and who you help along the way.
Traditional endorsement systems are meaningless because anyone can endorse anyone. A stranger clicks a button, and your profile gains a data point that carries no signal. TCTF's endorsement model is fundamentally different: only people who have actually collaborated with you can endorse your skills.
The system tracks collaboration relationships automatically. If you and another member completed a project together on Cometbid Social, reviewed each other's code, or participated in the same working group, the system recognizes that relationship. Only then can that person endorse specific skills they observed during the collaboration. The endorsement is tied to the specific project or activity where the skill was demonstrated.
This means every endorsement on TCTF carries real weight. When a profile shows 'Endorsed for API Design by 8 collaborators,' those 8 people actually worked with the professional on projects involving API design. They observed the skill firsthand. The endorsement is evidence, not a favor.
The system also prevents reciprocal endorsement gaming. If two users exclusively endorse each other without broader collaboration patterns, the system reduces the weight of those endorsements. Genuine professionals have endorsements from diverse collaborators across multiple projects — not a small circle of mutual back-scratching.
✅Endorsements are limited to verified collaborators. The system tracks who actually worked together and only allows endorsements tied to real shared experiences. No strangers, no favors, no gaming.

Any ranking system that can be gamed will be gamed. TCTF's achievement system is designed with anti-gaming measures at every level. Volume without quality does not advance your rank — the system measures contribution quality through peer review scores, code complexity metrics, and outcome-based signals rather than raw counts.
Pattern detection identifies artificial behavior: bulk contributions to inactive repositories, coordinated endorsement rings, or sudden spikes in activity that do not match historical patterns. When suspicious patterns are detected, the system flags them for review and temporarily freezes rank progression until the activity is verified as genuine.
Time-based requirements prevent sprint-gaming. Certain achievements require sustained activity over weeks or months — you cannot compress a month of genuine contribution into a weekend of artificial activity. The system also weights recent activity more heavily than historical activity, so a rank reflects current capability rather than past accomplishments that may no longer be relevant.
Transparency is the final anti-gaming measure. Every achievement shows the specific activity that earned it. Other members can see exactly what contributions led to a rank. If something looks artificial, the community itself becomes a verification layer. The combination of algorithmic detection and community transparency makes gaming TCTF's system significantly harder than gaming a simple endorsement counter.
🛡️ Anti-gaming at every level: quality over volume, pattern detection for artificial behavior, time-based requirements that prevent sprint-gaming, and full transparency so the community can verify any achievement.
TCTF's achievement system exists because the professional world has a trust problem. Resumes are inflated. Endorsements are meaningless. Certifications prove you passed a test, not that you can do the work. Our system is different because it is built on evidence — real contributions, verified collaborations, and actual outcomes. When someone reaches Expert rank on TCTF, it means something. When they show endorsements from 12 collaborators, those are 12 people who watched them work. The achievement system is not gamification — it is verification. And in a world drowning in fake credentials, verification is the most valuable thing a platform can offer.
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