+1 to this. >"However, I don't think it is as simple as offering additional colors." I would like to echo the sentiment that different shapes, letter symbols like P and K, or colors with other different values (other than hue) could move beyond this. >"A tally of prepared spells (would this be best as a per spell level total, a complete total, or both?)" Complete total, a single counter. If absolutely necessary, then add a tooltip that shows the tally per level when you hover over the prepared counter. >"A way of indicating domain spells (or other non-tallied spells) which
would be excluded from the total and be visually distinct from other
spells" While some have suggested something like a "Square", I would prefer a more distinct symbol that communicates clear intent. So I'm fond of the following symbols: - A crown symbol - An "A" symbol (always prepared) - An "X" symbol (special in some way) A piece of feedback missing as well is the difference between "Known" and "Prepared", so I'd also be happy with separate counters for these as well. I could see "K" and "P" symbols for these on the radio buttons. If going with text-based characters, then I'd suggest: - "K" for known - "P" for prepared - "S" for special >"A way of indicating spells from different classes when multiclassing" I'm not extremely concerned with this one. Different spell tabs for each class? A sub-tab system within Spells to separate classes? The OGL sheets already have a way to mark which class a spell belongs to, with the text boxes in each spell's edit widget, but they're not used for anything outside of the charactermancer, so simply having the ability to filter spells might be all you need? Whether that's some buttons at the top a la the Shaped sheets or the new Features & Traits UI which will simply hide the ones that don't match the class filter, or some other categorization. And if going with the new filtering UI, I could see retooling the "Class" and "Type" boxes under each spell with dropdown options that interact with the same sort of filtering that Features & Traits uses. Do that, instead of plain text. So I'd suggest the following: Class: - Dropdowns for each class, as normal - Dropdown for "custom", which gives you a textbox to type a custom name. Alternatively, this just lets you select whatever your current custom class name(s) is(are). In strict hypothesis, you might have a spell from a custom class that you aren't multiclassed into (e.g. Magic Initiate), so I'd prefer just "Custom" being the option for plain text. Type: - "Known", for known spells. - "Prepared", for prepared spells. - "Feat", for feat spells. - "Boon", for boon spells. - "Item", for item spells (staff, wand, scroll). - "Other", for anything else we might not have thought of, or that might be part of somebody's homebrew system not represented here. Maybe this, too, becomes a plain text box, and every custom name not-already-in-use then adds to the list of things you can filter for. >"A way of indicating spells with other origins (i.e. feats, class abilities, items etc.)" Simply having a way to count "prepared" spells and then exclude others via pretty much any symbolic system that's visible would suffice. So the "innate" box is a pretty good way to adding text that's not in the spell's name, to differentiate them. Maybe just giving the Innate box a different name and/or changing the hint text to suggest multiple different usages at once might be good (instead of only 1, as now). If Innate retains its current purpose, then I would avoid using it as the way to automatically exclude the spell from being prepared. In strict hypothesis, you could have a spell that you can cast 1/day but not with spell slots, but you could also have to prepare it to cast it more often (and can still cast it innately). Plus, with versatility in its usage, you might even just write charges or consumable item quantities. Whatever solution is used, you'll want to avoid creating a problem like: "I prepare Magic Missile but I also have a Wand of Magic Missiles and can't find a way to combine these markers without duplicating the spell". My Armorer Artificer, if he had that wand, would have it as an Artificer spell, but always have it prepared, and would also be able to expend charges on his wand to cast it. >"A way of indicating spells that should be ignored by the charactermancer when leveling up." I've not encountered many particular issues with this one, and have no comments to offer. I play a TCE artificer and so have to do everything custom on my free account. I just know that typing in the class name under each spell will tell the charactermancer which ones to look at.