EzekielRaiden
Follower of the Way
I find this very interesting, because most 4e characters never got as complex as, say, a high-level Wizard or Druid did in 3.5e. In fact, by comparison to 3e or PF, 4e was absolutely WAY more tame in terms of both the total amount of content published, and in terms of the level of inter-connectedness of that content. It had many powers and feats and such, to be sure, but a single character was usually unable to access 90% of those powers and half or more of those feats.Yeah, I really enjoyed 4e and what it was trying to do, but while I could handle the bandwidth of that, 4e's way of showing how much more powerful characters got over the levels did make it hard for a lot of people to keep up- the increased complexity just falls over with a lot of my RPG-playing pals.