@Mike S. - I switched from Pathfinder to 5e over a year ago. As a GM I am much happier and my players also seem to enjoy it. I have played games with all of the sheets. There is a sense of nostalgia for the Community Created sheet, Actoba really laid the groundwork for great sheets. All in all it is a simple, generally intuitive sheet, however as no one is maintaining this sheet it has fallen behind in feature/functionality. The OGL sheet is simple. It allows you to drag and drop from the compendium. It has a pretty a nice companion script that provides some functionality. It is what all Wizards of the Coast Roll20 Modules support natively. The challenge that I have with the sheet: The SRD is not complete, so if it's not there... you're manually inputting monsters. If they add more and more compendium support, maybe this becomes a non-issue. It isn't as flexible as the either the Community Created or Shaped Sheets, meaning if you like to change things up, it can be harder to accomplish that with the OGL sheet. If you plan to run RAW (rules as written) then maybe this isn't terribly important to you. The Shaped Sheet is the largest and most robust sheet, but absolutely no where near the complexity of the Pathfinder sheet, so it still performs well. You can use Drag and Drop from the compendium with the Shaped Sheet. It includes many useful macros built into the sheet that create clickable chat output for npc statblocks, attacks, spells... pretty much everything you would need. The Shaped Companion is amazing, it has statblock import, spell import, monster import, ammo tracking, rest tracking, trait and feature tracking, can quickly and easily create token actions for you... this thing has cut my preparation time by a ridiculous amount of time. Previously I would spend more time in Monster/NPC prep... now I spend time polishing maps up, creating nice handouts, and doing things that improve the quality of the game, rather than data entry, token setup, etc...