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<blockquote data-quote="Thasmodious" data-source="post: 4931980" data-attributes="member: 63272"><p>It's not. </p><p></p><p>But I think the central point of relaxedarmageddon's post is this - </p><p></p><p>"Reading comments from people who regularly play 4E, there doesn't seem to be the same line between the first three books and supplemental material."</p><p></p><p>Which I think is true. DDI is a big part of why. Everything is available to you, everything is in the CB and presented as options of equal weight. But it's just part. Another big part is just the way the edition is being organized. We knew from the beginning that the PHB would be a numbered series. The books aren't presented as "here's the three you need and a whole bunch of supplements" but as an ongoing collection of essentials. I like the organization, its easy to understand and weight. One series for classes, one series for monsters, one supplement book per completed power source, two books per campaign setting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Thasmodious, post: 4931980, member: 63272"] It's not. But I think the central point of relaxedarmageddon's post is this - "Reading comments from people who regularly play 4E, there doesn't seem to be the same line between the first three books and supplemental material." Which I think is true. DDI is a big part of why. Everything is available to you, everything is in the CB and presented as options of equal weight. But it's just part. Another big part is just the way the edition is being organized. We knew from the beginning that the PHB would be a numbered series. The books aren't presented as "here's the three you need and a whole bunch of supplements" but as an ongoing collection of essentials. I like the organization, its easy to understand and weight. One series for classes, one series for monsters, one supplement book per completed power source, two books per campaign setting. [/QUOTE]
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