Your child has been assessed by their coaches.
They are ready for Brown II.
This is your official invitation.
Think about where this started. A child who was new to everything. The uniform. The class. The coaches they had never met.
Now look at them.
14 levels later, they walk into The Training Grounds differently. They carry themselves differently. And the coaches who have watched them every step of the way are telling you: they are ready for the final chapter.
Brown II is the last grading before the tip system begins. After this, three tip gradings stand between your child and Black Belt. This registration is the door into that final run. And their coaches would not open it if your child was not ready to walk through it.
The standard rises. Every kick your child has built over years of training is now being refined to its highest point. Speed, power, and precision working together at the same time.
Full defensive mastery. No gaps remaining. Your child learns to read an incoming combination and respond correctly, not just to single attacks, but to sequences.
Any situation. Any type of attack. Your child learns to assess, decide, and respond. Not a fixed reaction. An intelligent one. This is the level where self-defence becomes a genuine life skill.
Movement quality, not just movement completion. Your child learns to execute tricking combos with smoothness, which requires control, timing, and patience. All three are growing in your child right now.
At Brown II, your child is not learning new things. They are becoming someone new. The training at this level is about consolidation, and consolidation is the hardest, most important work in the entire program.
Situational response means your child does not have a fixed reaction. They assess, decide, and act. That kind of composure goes far beyond the training floor.
Nothing left unaddressed. Every area of training is brought to its highest point before the tip system begins. The coaches leave no gaps going into this final stretch.
The Blackbelt Journey Booklet asks your child to think about who they have become. That level of self-awareness at a young age is rare. It is worth more than any technique.
You got them here. You held the standard when they wanted to stop. This moment belongs to your family, not just your child. Take a moment to recognise what that actually required.
Your child is assessed across five areas. Not compared to other students. Measured against the Brown II standard by coaches who know exactly how far they have come.
Parents are welcome to watch.
Bring your phone. This one is worth recording.
Earning Brown II opens the tip grading system. Three tip gradings stand between your child and Black Belt. Each tip is a checkpoint, not a hurdle. This is how we make sure every Black Belt at Invincible HQ genuinely earned it.
I sat down to read his Journey Booklet expecting a few dot points. Instead I read three pages about who he has become and why. I did not expect to cry. He is thirteen years old and he understands himself in a way I did not at thirty.
— David, Invincible Junior ParentThere were moments across the years where I wondered if we were doing the right thing keeping her in. Now I watch her move on that floor and I know. You can see the years in every technique. It is not something you can fake.
— Sandra, Invincible Junior ParentHe told me Brown II was hard. I told him that was the point. Watching him grade, I could see exactly what the hard work had built. His coaches could too. That room felt like the beginning of something, not the end.
— Chris, Invincible Junior ParentIf your child has received their invitation, they are ready. Their coaches would not put them forward otherwise.
Grading Day is a full event. Your coaches spend significant time preparing each child's individual assessment. The fee covers the event, the belt, and the certificate. We keep it as low as possible because every child deserves this experience.
