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Aside from that the book is laid out better and contains far less typos and content errors than the V20 Companion. I could recommend this in its PDF form for $9.99, but not for $17.99. As a fun foray into V:TM fiction, it is well written, but still way overpriced for what you are getting.
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Again, it’s an interesting read, but it’s not a book many will find a use for in their own campaign. The book contains eighteen different biographies and an eight page introduction discussing how the core thirteen Clans deal with rebellion. It’s just that the contents are nothing but NPC biographies and stat blocks, so it’s really only useful if the Storyteller isn’t that good at making his own characters. That doesn’t mean the book is bad by ANY stretch of the imagination. The problem is that the book is of limited use to most people that play Vampire: The Masquerade. It has nearly double the page count and some very nice artwork. The good news is that Children of the Revolution is a vastly superior product that the V20 Companion. At least they got their PDF in early September. So once again, White Wolf and company have kind of screwed over their most loyal customers and charged them MORE for getting the project out the door in the first place. As well, Kickstarter backers had to pay $25 or more for just the PDF while it’s on for “only” $17.99. Now, the physical copy of Children of the Revolution that backers were supposed to receive still has not arrived (three months late and counting) but the Print on Demand version, which is nearly half the price but lacking the faux leather cover, can be obtained easily. Like many who were unhappy with how White Wolf and Onyx Path handled the V20 Companion I refused to back Children of the Revolution because I didn’t want to pay sixty dollars for a book that would have been the same low level of quality. In the end, it had only half the backers and little over half the funds that the V20 Companion raised. In fact, it came down to the wire (twenty-two hours or so before deadline) for Children of the Revolution to be funded. I bring this up because Children of the Revolution was White Wolf’s second Kickstarter project and the thing nearly failed because of how bad the V20 Companion turned out to be and because of how poorly White Wolf handled the whole affair. If you visit the Kickstarter project page you can still see irate backers complaining about this thing. Fifty dollars for eighty pages of crap was what it boiled down to. Plagued by massive delays, backers were outraged with the final product which was formatted poorly, typo laden, lacking any real content and massively overpriced. White Wolf’s first Kickstarter project, Vampire: The Masquerade 20th Anniversary Edition Companion was a financial success, but a huge failure in the eyes of critics and fans alike. Publisher: White Wolf/Onyx Path Publishing Children of the Revolution (Vampire: The Masquerade 20th Anniversary Edition)