Just to chip in on the PDF front, as someone new to looking at the rules:
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Ive been collecting epic for a bit over a year now and until yesterday id never really got motivated to play the game (largely because I know no one else who plays) but also because to play yesterday (vs myself

) I ended up with my laptop on the board with 5 PDFs open. What’s worse is these PDFs are not even bookmarked, so navigation is appalling

 – the EA Compendium PDF, for example, doesn’t even have a running header, meaning you have to scroll all the way back to the index to navigate, in a 130page document this is not acceptable. Surely someone who makes the PDFs that are linked on tac com has a copy of adobe acrobat? ÂÂ

. The section numbering system is good, but when new to the rules still requires cross referencing with the index) ÂÂ
Printed rules are essential in my view, even if the complete rulebook is not needed the complete *rules* are (including all advanced rules etc) – eg look at the current 40k and fantasy warhammer starter sets, with massively condensed rulebook sizes but all the rules. That said, the rules being available online free is what finally got me to start epic.
I would also never buy a starter set/bundle if it was not discounted.