Crimson 3 is such an easy system to navigate, that you might find it easier to copy and paste your screens and duplicate them, then you can use tag folder hierarchy to edit the tags to have as many screens as you want, and set up about as fast, with the disadvantage of needing to be repeated to rebuild when you want to change them all.
Crimson 3 offers Master Slide pages. Basically, you can use any Page as an overlay or background for your current page. I use these a lot for common menu borders (navigation along the bottom, alarms and status across the top).
So master slides are something you may want to use for this.
There are also pop up windows with which you can build your own fully functional parameterization system, but it's not done for you. You get to choose how it works, but you gotta build it with Crimson tags and with your creativity, and your logic to get from A to B.
There is also what Crimson refers to as widgets that allow you to create your own reusable resource pane objects, but I have not made use of Widgetizing yet. I got a little confused during an earlier attempt. I think I need a walk through video explanation and example to understand widgets and how they might be applied in your case to extend and include the utility of parameterization as found in FTView.
One big recommendation. Set up your tags first. Set up data types, display types, colors, labels, descriptions and all that before you start using them (or as you begin using them). Learn to copy and paste-special-selective to make all your alarm tags the same format, color and for example, or to assign the same alarm ranges to all of your analog temperature tags.
Then when you use the tag, literally drop it on screen, it will pretty much be done. You can then drill in and deselect the tag referenced properties of the object, and make them different as needed. This is a huge time saver along with the slick alignment and copy paste operations in the editor.
Also, don't be afraid to rename anything at any time. Crimson will fix the tag name everywhere instantly. The only bug I have found here, is that if your tag name has two or more underscores between numeric characters, Crimson might alter the name when you drop the tag. It is obvious though and easy to fix.
Did you import 6 hundred various tags and need to organize them? No problem, make some folders, drag and drop your tags, put them in any order you want.
Better yet, make a folder first, get the tags all set up, copy and paste the folder ten times, edit each folders' tags' to change the core (address) only.
It's different. It is like switching from a Chrysler Luxury Minivan with Minibar and Fridge to a Ferrari with custom tuning shop, and trailer full of hand tools.
Paul