You have a right to be confused... After reading the entire thread and being in the middle of doing my landscaping, I will take the liberty to summarize.
There are two main schools of thought, and frankly, both will deliver nice landscaping. Technique 1 is to use plaster cloth and then cover with Gypsolite/Structolite (same product/different manufacturers) to add bulk and texture. Drawbacks are the expense of plaster cloth. Since you can't successfully use a fast setting plaster as a pseudo-plaster cloth due to working time, you're sort of stuck using commercial plaster cloth. It is easier and it's much less messy.
The second technique is to use the long-setting plaster with paper towels to make your own hard shell, and then treat that. I say, "treat that" because in my experience, a single layer of paper towel/Gypsolite is not strong enough. I had some areas where the plaster impregnation was less than optimum and it started cracking and in one case I put my hand through it. Therefore, you need to add something else. In my case it's Sculptamold.
I personally felt that the rough texture of Gypsolite was too rough. I wanted a smoother, more controllable surface. But Sculptamold defeats the cost savings of using Gypsolite in the first place since it's over $6.00 a bag and I've gone through 7 bags already and barely have one end of the layout in terrain. There's a whole other end that's going to get a mountain and more terrain that will probably consume another 7 bags. That's over $80 worth, versus the <$20/50 lbs for the plaster. Oh well...
But after reading this, I'm probably going to try and use some of the more textured materials for top coats and see what happens.