It's funny, I've been playing with a dropping resistor on my DRRI today, (cause I was bored mainly), but my B+ was running at a fairly high voltage at the bias I wanted to run them, and I wanted to bring voltages down closer to the schematic.
The schematic for the DRRI states 396V b+, 391 at the plates, and -37V at the grid. The original AB763 schematic shows 420V, 415 at the plate, with -35V at the grid. I'm not sure what the original transformer specs are, but in the DRRI, mine reads about 200ish ohms DC resistance across the primary.
On my amp, where I was happy setting the bias, (around %60), I was getting around 431V B+, 427V at the plate, and -41V at the grid.
I ended up using a 150R resistor off the rectifier, and got my B+ to around 406V, and my plates just over 402V, My grid is now sitting at -38V or so. What I found surprising is there's only a 10V or so drop across the 150R resistor, but it had a fairly large impact on the voltages through the rest of the amp at the bias setting I like.
Does it sag more? Hard to say, I kind of doubt the 5AR4 would sag much anyways, with 65mAish of current, so the resistor might have added some sag in. It seems to have more dynamics, and pick attack makes a larger impact, but that could be just because of the lower voltages across the entire amp. Everything dropped by close to 25V. Sounds minor, but that's at every node, it seems to make a big difference.
I do have some 16V/5W zeners here, I never even tried them, if I had read your post earlier I probably would try clipping them in to see, but now it's pretty much buttoned up.