
Hawkmoon269 |

Will 36 do? Blessing of The Gods from RotR Errata.
May I ask why you need 20 additional copies? Were you short somehow or are you doing something of your own making?

Greg Guillory |
Hmm. I have to check which version of the base set I have, but if there are 36 of them in that print to order set, I believe that might be the answer. Any Idea what the text difference is? To answer the other part of you question I was building out each of the base and add-on characters per the suggested equipping of the instructions. Technically I believe I only need 18 to do this.

Hawkmoon269 |

Ah. But you shouldn't have built characters that you aren't going to play. So, you don't need more blessing of the gods. What you need is to decide which characters you will be playing and then not build the decks for anyone else.
If you want to start a new character, you may, but it’s important that you do not keep decks for characters you’re not actively playing; doing so would use up cards that you should be encountering during play. The base set is designed to have no more than 4 character decks built at one time; the Character Add-On Deck, available separately, expands the maximum number of concurrently built decks to 6. If you switch characters for some reason, it’s best to write down the cards in the previous character’s deck and return the cards to the box until you need to use it again.
Oh. And the text difference is about the Blessing of the Gods copies the powers of the top card, instead of treating it like it is the top card.
Now, if you really want to do that, go ahead. But the game is intended to never have more than 6 characters deck built and also to only have decks built for the characters you are actively playing with. If you are playing as Valeros, Seelah, Lini, and Kyra, then Ezren shouldn't be sitting in the box with a copy of Force Missile and various other cards. Those cards should be in the pool of cards to build locations.
If you did build all the character decks, you might not have enough blessings to setup a scenario, even if you had 20 more than what came in the box.