The DM's Kit is the only Essentials resource that has rules for things like encounter and skill challenge construction.
Those are in the RC. They're expanded on in the DM's Kit sure, but the actual rules are in the RC.
It is no less a requirement than the DMG. In many ways, it is inferior to the DMG.
Again since the rules are in the other books, I'm saying it's pretty much a good buy maybe, and a good idea, but by no means "necessary."
Whether or not it's inferior to the old DMG is... subjective.
That Essentials is cheaper than the core material is an illusion. It is easier to get in to, but that's only because the Essentials characters are much easier to play. It's an overall positive move for the game, but don't let the marketing lies fool you.
It's easier to get into for more reasons outside of the rules.
Less for a single person to have to buy.
Clear avenues of explanation as to what is available/needed for a store to carry.
Clear avenue/explanation as to what products match your "place" in the game.
Easy to use products filled with everything needed to use them. (IE the box has the adventure, the maps, the tokens...)
Nothing to do with marketing "lies," and everything to do with what they've actually done.
Let me put it to you this way: three years ago, I bought my nephews the core set plus a 1" circle die punch so they could play D&D 4e. In total, I spent $98 retail. To achieve the same breadth of functionality, I'd have to spend $130 retail on two Heroes books, the RC, the DM Kit, and the Monster Vault. If you suppose that I only needed to buy them one Heroes book, then I'd be at $110 retail. It's not a terrible deal because the enclosed adventures and tokens are actually pretty nice. However, it's not any cheaper.
You get more for your money for starters, and we're still disagreeing on how needed the DM's kit is.
And again I said- it depends on how you want to get into it. You can get into it very inexpensively, or spend a lot on it. They've opened it up, to let you customize a lot more.
You've been screwed by them.
No... I haven't. I'm sorry you feel you have.
Wizards has spent the last 6-9 months using our subscription money to replicate functionality that we already had. They could have designed the CB to operate in an off-line mode with Silverlight using the downloaded database, but they did not.
Doesn't bother me
The last six months of Dragon content has done little more than contribute to feat- and background-bloat. For instance, take that Wilden article today. The flavor of the article makes no sense. The feats contained therein are grotesquely situational. This article is of no use to anyone. It might be one thing if this article were an outlier, but garbage like this shows up in Dragon every single week. It's telling that the most interesting things on the Wizards website last week were the free previews of Essentials material.
This is subjective opinion. You're welcome to any opinion you want. You dislike the content they are providing you. This isn't "screwing you" or me, or anyone else. It's just that you don't like the ontent. It's not like they're sitting on "better" content twisting their evil mustaches and laughing as they release inferior content for some reason.
Outside of DDI, our books have been rendered nigh-worthless by updates, including updates for books released in the very same month as the book itself. At this point, it's clear that Wizards isn't play-testing their games very well. I don't think they even have a good grasp on how their own game works. I don't know about you, but if I spend $30 on a RPG book, I expect a certain standard of quality that simply isn't met by Wizards.
We can get into an argument about this in another thread... Suffice it to say I preffer the model that submits updates rather then ignoring them until the system overloads and they have to reset to a new edition.
If this update process keeps us from a new edition down the road- yay!
I suppose it's all right, though, if you think that sort of treatment from Wizards is acceptable. I, for one, am beginning to grow weary.
That's your right... It's probably not the game for you. It's a taste thing. Some would rather the game be released and that be it. Others want the problems tracked/updated.
Whether some people have been screwing Wizards by subscribing for a month, downloading everything and then cancelling is a separate issue entirely.
What's that have to do with anything?
Your analogy works as long as no bus is runs the light. I merely think we should keep our eyes on the oncoming traffic while we cross the road.
Sure... but keeping an eye open and actively fearing are two different things.
To make the analogy ridiculous, there is a bus: it's the subscription-only character builder. Hopefully it will stop at the light. Maybe it won't. My point is that we should be aware of the bus. Instead, you insist that it will always stop at the light.
Sure, be aware of the bus... That's fine and rational. But fearing it's going to hit you because it exists when it hasn't run any red lights, the driver is alert, and the brakes work... is irrational.
It's also irrational to mindlessly apologize for an entity that does not have one's interests in mind.
Who's doing that? I'm presenting evidence to show where I'm coming from. No mindlessness involved.
We are at an impasse. Where you see no evidence of moving to a subscription-only model, I see them making a CB that works on a subscription-only model. Where you see continued support for physical products, I see them flailing about in desperation because the old splatbook treadmill no longer works. I don't think further discourse between us on this topic will be productive.
Nothing about subscription model. I was talking about digital only model.
I think we are at an "impasse."
I get tired of statements like "mindless apologizing" being applied to anything that isn't painting WoTC in a negative light.