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Articles covering ASVAB scores, line score strategy, bonus planning, career decisions, officer versus enlisted, reserve life, benefits, and what Marine service is actually like.

Start Here

Use this page to move from broad research to a practical next step. Start with score rules, then compare job paths, pay, benefits, and daily life.

For test prep, start with the Marine ASVAB study guide, Marine PiCAT study guide, or Marine ASTB-E study guide.

Test Scores and Selection

Score research matters because Marine job choice often depends on line scores, program rules, and timing. Use these articles before you talk through options with a recruiter or officer selection office.

Best first step: Match the job field you want to the score family it uses.

Careers and MOS Research

Use the MOS articles to compare daily work, training path, civilian transfer, and the kind of person who tends to fit each field. A strong pick is one you can explain in plain terms.

Research goalGood starting point
Compare combat rolesInfantry, artillery, armor, engineer, reconnaissance
Compare technical rolesAviation, cyber, intelligence, maintenance, communications
Compare civilian transferLogistics, supply chain, construction, security, legal

Pay, Benefits, Reserve, and Life

These articles help you check the parts that affect family planning, school plans, housing, health care, and daily expectations. Read them after you narrow the job list.

Decision check: A job can look strong on paper and still be wrong if the lifestyle, reserve schedule, or pay path does not fit your situation.

ASVAB Line Scores for Marine Warrant Officer MOS

Marine warrant officer score planning differs because most warrant paths are prior-enlisted. Your earlier ASVAB history still matters as feeder context.

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March 29, 2026

How to Become a Marine Warrant Officer

Marine warrant officers are prior-enlisted technical leaders, not a direct-entry path for civilians. Here is how the warrant board and WOBC work.

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March 29, 2026

What Happens at Marine Boot Camp

Marine Boot Camp is 13 weeks of phased physical, mental, and team-based training that ends with the Crucible and graduation.

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March 29, 2026

Why Marines Don't Have Medics: How Navy Corpsmen Serve With the Corps

Marines do not have their own medic MOS. Navy hospital corpsmen fill the medical role alongside Marine units, from battalion aid stations to combat zones.

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March 29, 2026