Scenario testing is a way to compare what happens when assumptions change. A projection may show one result under a base case, another under a cautious case and another under a different retirement age, benefit start date or spending level. The result is conditional: it shows what happens under the assumptions shown, not what will happen.

Sensitivity analysis is more focused. It changes one input at a time, or one small group of inputs, to show which assumptions drive the result. This helps explain whether a projection is mainly sensitive to spending, inflation, return assumptions, fees, longevity, public-benefit timing, tax treatment or a rule threshold.

A deterministic range is not a probability range. If a calculator shows several scenario results, those outputs are what-if comparisons unless the model explicitly uses probability assumptions. A base case is a reference point, not automatically the most likely future.

Small changes can sometimes produce larger effects. This can happen when a change crosses a threshold, affects a tax or benefit calculation, shifts income into another year, compounds over many years, or changes the order of returns while withdrawals are occurring.

The useful question is not which scenario is right. It is what changed, whether the change is material, whether the assumptions are consistent, and what remains outside the model. The article How OpenBook Projections Work explains projection mechanics; Why Retirement Projections Change - and When to Update Them explains why projections change; this article explains how to compare those changes without turning them into predictions.