I've been using D&D Beyond for my latest campaign and it's proven to be quite successful, however I constantly find myself running into the same issue.
Many guides, tools and references online will refer to positions and pages in one of the books by page number, and currently there's no way to jump to the equivalent position in D&D Beyond unless that reference/page links you directly there.
I might be reading the hardback copy of an adventure, and want to bookmark a reference point, I need to search it manually, or note down the whole section.
Also when following the quick setup guides that help you place actual bookmarks in your books, it's REALLY difficult to find the associated content in D&D Beyond (when they don't actually describe what the page is about). For example, "keep a tab on the random encounters on page xyz".
Occasionally this does come in handy. I have the hard copy and can do it the old fashioned way, but it seems like a good use case to identify what's on page 197 of the PHB (or whatever). This is especially important when referencing rulings by Jeremy Crawford.
I've been using D&D Beyond for my latest campaign and it's proven to be quite successful, however I constantly find myself running into the same issue.
Many guides, tools and references online will refer to positions and pages in one of the books by page number, and currently there's no way to jump to the equivalent position in D&D Beyond unless that reference/page links you directly there.
I might be reading the hardback copy of an adventure, and want to bookmark a reference point, I need to search it manually, or note down the whole section.
Also when following the quick setup guides that help you place actual bookmarks in your books, it's REALLY difficult to find the associated content in D&D Beyond (when they don't actually describe what the page is about). For example, "keep a tab on the random encounters on page xyz".
Occasionally this does come in handy. I have the hard copy and can do it the old fashioned way, but it seems like a good use case to identify what's on page 197 of the PHB (or whatever). This is especially important when referencing rulings by Jeremy Crawford.
This has been brought up before. It's unfortunately a no-go because different editions of the books will have references on different pages.