Hi,
These actions ( like 99.9% all custom actions) will remain as separate from the official set of actions provided with PlayMaker, I think it's a strong direction in not trying to put everything for everyone, but keep it reasonable, and use the ecosystem and the wiki to server these custom actions the best way possible.
"Templates" are coming in the ecosystem ( as well as samples and misc packages) if that's your request FrickReich, but they will server only true PlayMaker templates as we know them. It would be misleading to categories actions as "templates".
We can create more actions categories, that's more then welcome and recommanded,
What I would like for the future of the ecosystem is a way to register to the ecosystem server and start organizing your favorite actions into "bundles", so that in a fresh project, you import PlayMaker, the ecosystem browser, and then you can pick a bundle saved in your account and a bunch of actions would be installed in one click. I too dream of that on a daily bases, and I think I can do it, even as a proper package, by running a headless Unity version on an amazon server and create packages on the fly with content that you define, so say you want have certain projects that needs a particular set, you can create one for that, and so forth for other projects, just like unity's layout system basically, only for custom actions and tools around PlayMaker.
But before I tackle this, I need to first allow third party addons to play nice within the ecosystem so that you can for example search for ngui actions, or arrayMaker actions, and the ecosytem will double check ( and even scan your project) on what's possible for you to get without having obvious errors about a required asset for that custom actions. I have the code already there to check and I can detect if you have indeed ngui, ArrayMaker or any asset that I would register on the ecosystem server as a requirement for certain actions to be searched for. that's going to be huge, then I'll do the custom bundles and user account for the ecosystem to evolve into a real productive tool in setting up and managing projects.
Bye,
Jean