Justin Alexander said:
The entirety of the rules for Phase III: Arkham Encounters describes exactly what Arkham Encounter you will have, depending on whether there's a gate in your location or not.
I don't think there's really anything particularly confusing about this. And if there were, I think the example stating "Location Encounter (With Gate)" clarifies it to the point where any and all doubt should be eliminated. (And clarification is, after all, the point of having examples in the rulebook.)
The only point that I'm trying to make is the rulebook is imprecise on this point. Your logic is a bit fuzzy also. The fact that Phase III is labeled "Arkham Encounters" is neither here nor there. The label that is attached to a phase is not a rule. Phase III could be labeled "Happy Fish Dance" and it would have no bearing on the rules.
It's also annoying that nowhere in the description of Phase III does it refer to the examples at the bottom of page 8 (or vice versa). They're just floating there. The examples on page 8 refer to Phase III only implicitly and by virtue of their general physical proximity. Compare this with, e.g., the example provided for flying monsters on page 14. The rules for flying monsters contains the text: "Flying monsters are explained in more detail in the 'Flying Monsters' diagram." There is no such text in the rules for Phase III that refers the reader to the examples on page 8. I agree that in general examples clarify rules, but an example cannot clarify a rule if the rule isn't there. In that case, the example is standing in for the rule.
In the course of my work I parse logical statements that are sometimes quite subtle. The "location encounter (with gate)" rules require the player to make assumptions that are based on tacit knowledge that comes from playing games. I'm simply reporting that I came across the absence of a rule - one that I assumed had been written down but it turns out that it hadn't. I accept that I'm apparently the only person who cares about this, but the absence of the rule is still a fact.
