What kind of drysuit are you speaking about? Neoprene or trilaminate? Also, how do you define "easy"? Something you need 20/30 dives to learn or something you instantly learn?
The thing is that, on my experience, usually a novice diver needs some dives to properly control a trilaminate drysuit, in the range of 5 to 30 dives, depending on the diver. And for a diver with something between 80 to 100 dives under the belt, well... 30 dives is a lot, and they would call the learning process "hard".
I agree, you'd love it; if you dive trilaminate and if you do not wear very thick undergarment, you are not going to need any weights most likely. Worst case, 1/2kg of V-weight on the tail of the tanks will work (usually it is better on the tail on my experience, but many other options are possible) - or even a belt, which has its own advantages.
Just FYI, the DIR philosophy follows some principles, among them these two:
1) if you don't need it, do not use it
2) keep it as simple as you can
So, first of all, add some weights only if you need them - see the concept of balanced rig
In case you need some kilos, V-weights and similar things are much simpler than a belt, and the belt is much simpler than pockets. However, this concept is a bit of extreme in this case in my opinion, especially if you don't do overhead/decompression.