Yup, pretty much. We get a lot of adventure paths, but books stuffed with new player options are few and far between.OK, maybe a bit hyperbolic, and yes, the announcement of Tasha's Cauldron is recent news, but I suspect the conversation will still revolve around Tashas and not RotFM. I think it shows that expanded character options get a lot more attention to adventure paths. Which makes total sense.
I certainly don't mind bringing in a handful of popular options from other, more specialized products. You shouldn't have to buy a Forgotten Realms book (the SCAG) to get access to the bladesinger, for example.As an aside, how does everyone feel about reprinting subclasses in this book that appear elsewhere (like bladesinger, eloquence bard, etc)?
If the book were mostly reprints with only a little original material, I would find that deeply annoying; I would skip buying a physical book and just buy the new stuff a la carte on D&D Beyond. (Normally I get both the physical book and the DDB version.) But the other way around, with mostly original content plus a few reprints, is perfectly fine as far as I'm concerned.
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