I appreciate hearing from you, Shawn, and while you say the editor (I'm guessing jim pinto?) performs an in depth evaluation of the work he receives, there is a massive number of mistakes carried over from the raw manuscript to the final, published product in nearly all of AEG's d20 products... Again, Rokugan and Spycraft excepted. The problem with Rokugan and Spycraft is AEG clearly shows they are more than capable of creating brilliant, gorgeous, properly edited books, then drops the ball on their other products. The one word and Swashbuckling Adventures books are clearly rushed, written by way too many authors all working in the dark as to what the others are doing, and the art and editing are extremely sloppy by comparison to Rokugan and Spycraft. I understand there is a low staff to product ratio, and AEG isn't as "big" as we might think based on their rather high profile, but proper editing is really IMPORTANT to the continued success and growth of the company.
IMO, AEG needs to reprioritize the editing of its books to include all of its d20 product lines. I'm not the only one complaining about it, either. A quick vote here or any online RPG forum would show that an overwhelming majority of gamers are fed up with the sloppy editing of AEG's d20 products, and that the continued sloppiness has caused many gamers to turn away from buying their products, because they simply cannot trust them to be properly edited and "rules kosher".
I want to make it clear that many of us (myself included) firmly believe that AEG has a VERY talented pool of freelance writers working for them (Mike Mearls, Kevin Wilson, Patrick Kapera, etc.), and this clearly shows in the great ideas presented in their products, but many of these ideas are not uniformly followed through with to make them playable--at least not without a certain amount of tweaking and guess work on the DM's part that shouldn't be there to begin with. I'm not talking about a quick individualized house ruling that AEG could not possibly plan for, I'm talking about rules that either are not clearly defined/converted, omitted entirely or are just plain broken and confusing to begin with. That's very bad, indeed.
I really like AEG's products---I've bought most of them, and I've always found some useful crunchy bits inside, despite all the glaring goofs---but AEG REALLY, REALLY need to professionally edit their books. I can't stress that enough!