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Many moons ago when CMAK came out, I put together the "CMAK Companion," a collection of historical tactical accounts from the Mediterranean theater, including North Africa, Sicily, and Italy. The goal of the CMAK Companion was to help bring the game to life by providing historical accounts of the types of battles that featured in CMAK.

Anyway, we still have some copies in stock, so I thought I would mention the book given the impending release of Gustav Line. While the book is 436 pages long, the first 270 pages cover North Africa, about 22 pages cover Sicily (10 accounts), and 143 pages cover Italy (57 accounts). For Sicily and Italy, there is a pretty good mix of accounts from US, British, Canadian, South African, New Zealand, Maori, and other troops (unfortunately not many German).

If you enjoy CM games, I think that you'll really enjoy the CMAK Companion, particularly if you're interested in the Mediterranean theater. Maybe some forum members who bought it in the past could post their thoughts?

I'd be happy to answer any questions that you have. Unfortunately, there is no a digital edition, and there will not be one, because most of the content is licensed from other publishers, who did not grant digital reprint rights.

The book is sold in the Battlefront store, although I note that the links to the table of contents, list of sources, etc. seem to be dead:

http://www.battlefront.com/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=shop.flypage_bfc&product_id=89&category_id=23&manufacturer_id=0&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=26

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I'd bite, but when I saw the US$23.00 shipping charge to Canada it just wasn't worth it. Sorry! ;-(

Yikes, I don't blame you!

I wanted to point out a couple of other things:

1) Note that while much of the material in the CMAK Companion covers North Africa rather than Sicily or Italy, the price has also been reduced over the years, so is now $10 rather than the original $20.

2) Here is a thread with comments/reviews from 2004 (when it was published), it might be helpful for anyone on the fence:

http://www.battlefront.com/community/showthread.php?t=50720&highlight=cmak+companion

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I thought it would be helpful if I posted the foreword, written by the battlefront team; while it was written with CMAK in mind, I think it still holds true with CMFI and Gustav Line:

*********************************

FOREWORD

From the very beginning, one of the main goals while developing the Combat Mission wargame series has been to create the most realistic combat simulation available on the commercial market. We knew that we had reached that goal when we saw people quoting historical accounts on our discussion boards when discussing tactics and strategies for the game.

"Combat Mission: Afrika Korps" introduces the Mediterranean Theater to the Combat Mission series. From Egypt and Tunisia to Crete, Sicily and Italy, it covers a vast territory and most of the duration of the Second World War. During these campaigns, strategies and tactics evolve, new equipment is deployed, even the nations at war come and go. There simply is no better "strategy guide" for such a deep game system than a collection of real historical accounts, memories, episodes and snapshots as Tom has put together in this book. Not only will you find a colorful and exciting background to the places and periods that the game covers, you will also learn about how the actual commanders fought their battles, facing the same tactical challenges that the player does when firing up a Combat Mission QuickBattle.

If there is one book and one book only you'd want to buy about tactical combat in the Mediterranean Theater, then this is it. It covers small unit actions in all of the Mediterranean campaigns, depicting everything from the early battles in the desert to the final showdown in Northern Italy. Describing actions involving infantry, armor, airborne, artillery, and other arms of the British, U.S., German, Canadian, New Zealand, Italian, Indian, Australian, and South African armies, the book has pulled together the best accounts of tactical combat from more than two dozen sources and is the essential background companion to the game—and to the Second World War in the Med in general.

Tom has done a great job of capturing all of the drama and atmosphere of the campaigns in the Mediterranean, from the exhilaration (or exhaustion!) after a successful mission to the tragedy of lost comrades-in-arms to the humorous incidents which inevitably occur in combat. Watch out, it's next to impossible to put down the book once you've read the first page!

Martin & the Battlefront.com Team

********************

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And here is the table of contents; the formatting for the page numbers is screwed up, please don't make me fix that!

*******************

TABLE OF CONTENTS

LIST OF MAPS. vi

FOREWORD vii

INTRODUCTION viii

A/ ITALIAN AFRICA. 1

1/ THE FIRST SHOTS OF THE DESERT WAR. 1

2/ WAR IN THE DESERT. 3

3/ AN OPPORTUNITY…TO GO ‘SWANNING’ ABOUT. 5

4/ TWENTY ACRES OF OFFICERS. 7

5/ TOBRUK, A FORTRESS TOWN. 9

6/ COMPLETE VICTORY. 13

7/ THE BATTERY COMMANDER, HIS BATMAN, AND A COOK. 19

B/ ROMMEL’S AFRICA. 25

8/ ORANGES AND LEMONS. 26

9/ I THOUGHT WE WERE WINNING. 27

10/ HOPELESSLY INADEQUATE. 33

11/ OVER WE GO. 35

12/ WE’LL HAVE NO DUNKIRK HERE. 38

C/ CRETE 41

13/ FERVENT ANTICIPATION. 42

14/ THINLY ARMOURED PERAMBULATORS. 46

15/ CONFUSION, PANDEMONIUM AND WAR CRIES. 51

16/ SOLDIERS OF THE WHITE AND RED ROSE. 52

17/ A GLINT OF STEEL AND A RATTLE. 57

18/ AND THEN YOU RUN AGAIN. 61

19/ THE ‘RED PATCH’. 64

D/ ROMMEL’S AFRICA, CONTINUED. 71

20/ THAT TANK COULD REALLY TAKE IT. 72

21/ THE RULES ARE THE SAME. 76

22/ A NUMBER OF 88mm GUNS. 78

23/ QUITE A REMARKABLE TRAJECTORY. 80

24/ A WELL-TRAINED COW PONY. 83

25/ A TURRET-DOWN MIND 87

26/ YOU MAY BRRREW UP. 90

27/ EVEN THE ITALIAN 47MM GUN WAS EFFECTIVE. 91

28/ WHERE THE DICKENS HAVE YOU BEEN? 93

29/ WE SHED OUR LIGHT-HEARTEDNESS AND EAGERNESS. 97

30/ THE POINT OF A PIN. 101

31/ BEAUTIFUL TIMING AND WONDERFUL COOLNESS. 105

32/ 60 OR 70 MONSTERS IN SOLID LINE ABREAST. 107

33/ WITH LESS THAN USUAL CARE AND GUIDANCE. 119

34/ A WEIGHT AND QUALITY OF SUPPORT. 123

35/ A BRAVE AND RESOURCEFUL GERMAN OFFICER. 127

36/ A PANDEMONIUM OF VIOLENCE. 129

37/ LED FROM THE FRONT. 137

38/ MAKE IT SIMPLE, MAKE IT SIMPLE. 139

39/ TRUSSED UP LIKE A CHICKEN. 152

40/ A SHARK AMONG MACKEREL. 154

41/ I’LL SWAN ABOUT IN FRONT OF IT. 156

42/ THE MASTER RACE. 160

43/ A SERIES OF MISFORTUNES. 162

44/ POURING BY LIKE A FLOOD. 167

45/ NO MORE THAN A PASSING INCIDENT. 170

46/ A ‘PARADE GROUND JOB’. 171

47/ I THINK THOSE TANKS ARE HOSTILE. 177

48/ AN UNKNOWN BRITISH SOLDIER. 180

49/ IN FULL COMMAND AT ALL TIMES. 183

50/ THE FLATNESS OF THE DESERT. 185

51/ THERE ARE NO ENEMY FORCES IN YOUR AREA. 188

52/ ATTACK! 190

53/ GET OUT, AND GET OUT BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. 192

54/ A POWERFUL, DEVASTATING BLOW. 198

55/ THE FIRE CAME FROM ALL DIRECTIONS. 202

56/ ONE HUNDRED PERCENT WAGNERIAN. 205

57/ BLISSFULL IGNORANCE. 207

58/ RISING AT DAWN TO MIX DOUGH WAS ‘BORING’. 209

59/ LITTLE TIME OR OPPORTUNITY FOR SWIMMING IN THE MEDITERRANEAN. 212

60/ SCOTLAND FOREVER AND SECOND TO NONE. 214

61/ A LONG WAY FROM LOCH TUMMEL AND LOCH RANNOCH. 218

62/ A ‘LAST MAN, LAST ROUND’ JOB. 222

63/ A SOLID WALL OF ENGLISH TANKS. 235

E/ NORTHWESTERN AFRICA. 243

64/ A SIGNIFICANT SUPERIORITY IN FIREPOWER. 244

65/ WHERE DID YOU AIM? 247

66/ COMPLETELY AT VARIANCE WITH DOCTRINE. 249

67/ THE SMALLER LUGER. 252

68/ HOW TO BE BOMBED. 254

69/ I WAS MAD. 258

70/ SOME COOLHEADED COLONEL. 262

71/ PROUD AFTER A GOOD DAY’S WORK. 263

72/ THE INTRODUCTION OF 10 PANZER DIVISION TO THE EIGHTH ARMY. 267

73/ TANK HUNTING. 271

74/ A HEAVY TOLL. 273

75/ DIESEL FUEL AND THREE INCH AMMUNITION. 274

76/ THE ARMY REALLY GETS AROUND. 277

77/ NONE OF THEM GOT THROUGH. 279

78/ LET THE BLOODY BLACK BASTARDS COME. 281

79/ SO I LOST MY JOB… 292

80/ WITH HIS REVOLVER AND KUKRI. 294

81/ A FINE BEGINNING. 297

F/ SICILY. 302

82/ A VERY DRAMATIC MOMENT. 303

83/ PLANS HELL! THIS MAY BE CUSTER’S LAST STAND. 307

84/ THE SEVEREST MEASURES. 309

85/ THE SAME RECOGNITION. 311

86/ PONTE PRIMASOLE 312

87/ SPLENDID FELLOWS. 314

88/ IT ALL WENT ACCORDING TO PLAN. 319

89/ FAILED AT A CRUCIAL MOMENT. 321

90/ NOTHING TO KEEP JERRY’S HEAD DOWN. 323

91/ THE BATTALION WAS OUT OF CONTROL. 325

92/ THE ONLY COHESIVE FORCE. 328

G/ SOUTHERN ITALY. 330

93/ CAREFUL PLANNING AND THROROUGH RECONAISSANCE. 331

94/ EXCESS LUGGAGE IN THIS TYPE OF WAR. 334

95/ A SIGH OF RELIEF. 336

96/ THE HAND SLOWLY TURNED. 339

97/ THE TACTICAL EMPLOYMENT OF HEAVY WEAPONS. 340

98/ BLESSINGS FROM THE GOD OF WAR. 341

99/ THE WORTH OF THE PIAT 344

100/ THE EFFECTS WERE IMMEDIATE. 348

101/ FIGHTING…HAD BECOME VERY BITTER. 352

102/ EVERY CONCEIVABLE USE. 358

103/ WELL, THE ARTILLERY FELL IN FRONT OF US FOR AWHILE… 360

104/ SHOCK ACTION. 360

105/ STREET FIGHTING. 360

106/ ZEROED IN. 360

107/ MEANINGFUL MISSIONS. 360

108/ WILLIE’S WORST WERFER. 360

109/ HERE COME THE BASTARDS. 360

110/ SILENT DEATH. 360

111/ THE FIRST ROUND ON ITS WAY. 360

112/ CONFUSION BECAME THE DOMINANT FEATURE. 360

113/ HAND GRENADES ANSWERED THE QUERY. 360

114/ BY INJUNCTION AND EXAMPLE. 360

115/ TO THE LEFT TIT. 360

116/ A MINOR CATASTROPHE. 360

117/ NO SUPPORTING FIRE WAS USED. 360

118/ COMPANY F NO LONGER EXISTED. 360

119/ PROPER ACTION WAS TAKEN. 360

120/ UPON THE FIRST RAYS OF SUNLIGHT. 360

121/ AMERICANO! 360

H/ NORTHERN ITALY. 360

122/ CONFUSION…A GOD OF BATTLE. 360

123/ WE WERE REALLY ENJOYING THIS WAR BUSINESS. 360

124/ UNFORTUNATELY, THE ORDNANCE TESTS WERE IN ERROR. 360

125/ OUT ON THE FORWARD SLOPE. 360

126/ LESSONS LEARNED. 360

127/ JERRY, OLIVE TREES, AND CEMETARY DISAPPEAR. 360

128/ CHIANTI COUNTRY TIGER COUNTRY 360

129/ THE WHOLE HILLSIDE OPENED FIRE. 360

130/ A BONA FIDE PRISONER OF WAR. 360

131/ HOLD AND CONTROL YOUR FIRE. 360

132/ AP SHELLS WITHOUT EFFECT. 360

133/ PURSUIT. 360

134/ IMPEDING GERMAN MOVEMENT. 360

135/ COUNTERATTACKING THE COUNTERATTACK. 360

136/ TAKE THE RIDGE AT ANY COST. 360

137/ WE MACHINE-GUNNED EVERYTHING. 360

138/ AN IMPRESSION OF IRRESISTABLE FORCE. 360

139/ THE LUCKIEST GUY IN THE WORLD. 360

140/ INFILTRATING THE LINE FORWARD. 360

141/ HOW CAN I ATTACK THE GOD-DAMN HILL? 360

142/ A NIGHTLY AFFAIR. 360

143/ EMPLACED AND MANNED BY KITCHEN PERSONNEL. 360

144/ BATTLE PATROL. 360

145/ A DECIDED BREAK. 360

146/ ON EVEN TERMS. 360

147/ THE FULL MIGHT OF ITS POWER. 360

148/ A SNARLING WHINE OVERHEAD. 360

149/ WE HAD GIVEN THE ENEMY HIS RUNNING SHOES. 360

150/ THE D-DAY DODGERS 360

***************************

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How about the 27 dollar for shipping in western europe. Luckely the dollar is week right now so I went ahead anyways. Dosent feel right when shipping is almost three times the price of the article you order but in this case I couldent help myself. Looking forward to a great read.

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Guys, I'm sorry about shipping, it is unbelievably expensive but out of my control.

If ever I do this again, I will obviously insist on digital rights so everyone will be able to download and read on their iPads...

I would love to do something like this for CMx2 East Front but seriously doubt that I will have the time.

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Ha, you sound like a Beta tester! Every minute testing how jeeps bog travelling over muddy ground is a minute NOT blowin' stuff up and having fun. :)

You're just not testing correctly.

Testing Scenario: Jeep Bogging

Terrain: Flat, dirt, heavy rain.

Tests: 9 independent trials (Jeeps) driving across 300m of terrain, straight line, 3 slow, 3 normal, 3 fast.

End of test: turn 3, Drive the MkIV previously hidden behind a copse of trees out and turn all those jeeps into 'splody things.

Reload, repeat for as many trials as necessary.

Testing variants: MkIII, MkV (you get the picture).

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You are actually testing that? There is hope.

Did you actually test the global conditions without the use of the muddy terrain tiles? In other words, did you ever take an average quick battle map and set the global ground conditions to muddy and then drive stuff around on it? I would be curious to know what you got if you tried that. With no mud terrain tiles - just with the global conditions set to muddy and with an average QB map.

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While all of these posts about besta-testing jeeps are absolutely fascinating, please save them for a different thread. In the meantime, here is the list of sources for the CMAK Companion:

************************

INDEX OF SOURCES.

A CAVALRYMAN’S STORY: MEMOIRS OF A TWENTIETH –CENTURY ARMY GENERAL by Hamilton H. Howze. Copyright © 1996 by the Smithsonian Institution. Used by permission of the publisher in excerpts 67, 68, 76, 81, 103, 108, 121, 133 &134.

ALAMEIN by Jon Latimer. Copyright © 2002 John Murray (Publishers) Ltd. Used by permission of the publisher in excerpts 1, 10, 56, 57, 61, 62 & 63.

BITTER VICTORY by Carlo D’Este. Copyright © 1988 by Carlo D’Este. Reprinted by permission of Don Congdon Associates, Inc. in excerpts 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89 & 96.

BRAZEN CHARIOTS by Robert Crisp. Copyright © 1959 by Robert Crisp. Used by permission of W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. in excerpts 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 32, 41 & 42.

DESERT DAWN: NORTH AFRICA BEFORE ROMMEL by David H. Lippman. Copyright © 1996 Europa Magazine. Used by permission of Europa Magazine in excerpts 5 & 7.

DESERT WAR: THE NORTH AFRICAN CAMPAIGN 1940-1943 by Alan Moorehead. Copyright © 2001 by Alan Moorehead. Used by permission of Penguin, a division of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. in excerpts 2, 6, 8, 31, 40 & 53.

INSIDE THE AFRIKA KORPS: THE CRUSADER BATTLES 1941-1942 by Colonel Rainer Kriebel and the US Army Intelligence Service, edited by Bruce I. Gudmundsson. Copyright © 1999 by Greenhill Books (Lionel Leventhal Limited). Used by permission of Greenhill Books in excerpts 22 & 50.

KIWIS VS. TIGERS by Colin Smith. Published in Issue 24 of the Journal of The Society of Twentieth Century Wargamers. Copyright © 1996 by Colin Smith. Used by permission of Colin Smith in excerpt 132.

LESSONS LEARNED IN COMBAT, NOVEMBER 7-8, 1942-SEPTEMBER 1944 by Headquarters, 34th Infantry Division (September 1944). Published by the U.S. Army Military History Institute. These materials are in the public domain and are reprinted in excerpts 93, 94, 95, 97, 104, 105, 106, 110, 111, 119, 120, 126, 131 & 135.

MEETING THE FOX by Orr Kelly. Copyright © 2002 by Orr Kelly. This material used with the permission of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. in excerpts 65, 69, 70, 71 & 79.

OFFICIAL HISTORY OF NEW ZEALAND IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR 1939-1945: 28 (MAORI) BATTALION by J.F.Cody. Published by War History Branch, 1965. Used by permission of the New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage in excerpts 15, 17, 72, 78, 123, 127 & 143.

OFFICIAL HISTORY OF NEW ZEALAND IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR 1939-1945: BATTLE FOR EGYPT by Lt. Col. J.L. Scoullar. Published by War History Branch, 1955. Used by permission of the New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage in excerpts 54 & 55.

OFFICIAL HISTORY OF NEW ZEALAND IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR 1939-1945: THE RELIEF OF TOBRUK by W.E. Murphy. Published by War History Branch, 1961. Used by permission of the New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage in excerpts 33, 34, 35, 36, 38, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48 & 49.

REPORT NO. 135, CANADIAN OPERATIONS IN SICILY, JULY-AUGUST 1943 by Historical Officer, Canadian Military Headquarters. Used by permission of the Directorate of History and Heritage, National Defense Headquarters (Canada) in excerpts 90, 91 & 92.

REPORT NO. 165, OPERATIONS OF 1 CDN DIV AND 1 CDN ARMD BDE IN ITALY 25 NOV 43-4 JAN 44 by Historical Section, Canadian Military Headquarters. Used by permission of the Directorate of History and Heritage, National Defense Headquarters (Canada) in excerpts 98, 99, 100, 101 & 102.

ROMMEL’S NORTH AFRICAN CAMPAIGN: SEPTEMBER 1940-NOVEMBER 1942 by Jack Greene and Alessandro Massignani. Copyright © 1994 by Jack Greene and Alessandro Massignani. Used by permission of Perseus Books Group in excerpts 3, 21, 27, 37 & 59.

ROMMEL’S WAR IN AFRICA by Wolf Heckman, translated by Stephen Seago. Copyright © 1981 by Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc. Used by permission of Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc. in excerpts 4, 9, 11, 12, 20, 23, 30 & 52.

SANTA MARIA INFANTE 351ST INFANTRY 11-14 MAY 1944, published by the Center for Military History. These materials are in the public domain and are reprinted in excerpts 112, 113, 114, 115, 115, 117 & 118.

SEEK, STRIKE, AND DESTROY: U.S. ARMY TANK DESTROYER DOCTRINE IN WORLD WAR II by Dr. Christoper R. Gabel. Published as LEAVENWORTH PAPER No. 12 by the Combat Studies Institute (September 1985). These materials are in the public domain and are reprinted in excerpts 64, 66, 73, 74, 75, 107, 124 & 125.

THE BATTLE OF ALAMEIN by John Bierman and Colin Smith. Copyright © 2002 by John Bierman and Colin Smith. Used by permission of Viking Penguin, a division of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. in excerpts 39, 51, 59, 61, 77 & 80.

THE OPERATIONS OF THE 2ND BATTALION, 349TH INFANTRY (88TH INF. DIV.) IN THE BREAKTHROUGH AND PURSUIT TO THE PO RIVER, 15-25 APRIL 1945 (Personal experience of a Company Commander) by Captain Paul R. Behnke, Infantry. Published by the U.S. Army Military History Institute. These materials are in the public domain and are reprinted in excerpts 142, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148 & 149.

THE ROCK OF ANZIO by Flint Whitlock. Copyright © 1998 by Westview Press, a member of the Perseus Books Group. Used by permission of Perseus Books Group in excerpt 109.

THE STRUGGLE FOR CRETE by I. McD. G. Stewart. Copyright © 1962 by Oxford University Press. Used by permission of Oxford University Press in excerpts 13, 14, 16, 18 & 19.

THE WAR NORTH OF ROME by Thomas R. Brooks. Copyright © 1996 by Thomas R. Brooks. Used by permission of Perseus Books Publishers, a member of Perseus Books, LLC in excerpts 122, 128, 129, 130, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140 & 141.

********************************

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Blimey, what a great trick for shifting remaindered stock. Kudos to Battlefront business skills, but my wallet is closed.

So what exactly is the trick? We have extra copies of the book..we have a game featuring two of the three theaters in the book...we have players that might be interested in the materials book...the price for the book has been reduced by half.

No worries if you don't want to buy it, but what would you prefer that I do? I suppose I could have thrown away all of the CMAK books, printed up some new ones without North Africa, and sold them for $$$ as the "CMFI Companion"--would that be better?

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So what exactly is the trick? We have extra copies of the book..we have a game featuring two of the three theaters in the book...we have players that might be interested in the materials book...the price for the book has been reduced by half.

No worries if you don't want to buy it, but what would you prefer that I do? I suppose I could have thrown away all of the CMAK books, printed up some new ones without North Africa, and sold them for $$$ as the "CMFI Companion"--would that be better?

Some people always see the glass half empty....with old lipstick stains around the edge, a cigarette stubbed out inside and backwash saliva afloat in it. The rest of us see a good deal that helps us understand the theater and it's issues a little better and maybe give us some ideas for designing scenarios that are a benefit to all. However I have to throw in with c3k's question. :P

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It is a shame this can't be sold in an eReader format.. would be far easier to sell.

Perhaps you can create a version only with the Sicily and Italy content, call it the CMFI companion and retain the rights to the digital versions for yourself.

totally agree about the e-reader format, but there's not much I can do at this point. most of the content in the book is licensed from publishers and they did not grant me the rights to publish digital versions, and i am not about to go through the hassle of contacting them all again and then paying them more for the digital rights.

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I have good memories of the book.

I read it while learning CMAK, and it was a great introduction into the context of the game. I received it together with the physical game media, so shipping was negligible at the time.

It was totally different from what I expected: I thought it would be an expanded rule-book, but instead it was a large collection of vivid battle stories.

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Not at all sure if this is possible (probably not) under the agreements but here goes.

Would it be possible to have this available on print on demand sites? Something similar like this book was done for another game I play and the author sent it to a site, can't remember the name, where you ordered it, the company printed it off, bound it and then sent it to you from whatever location was closest to you which brought down shipping costs.

Thought it would be worth asking!

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Would it be possible to have this available on print on demand sites?

*********

Thought it would be worth asking!

In theory, yes, this is possible, at least for a certain number of copies, although I'm not sure if I'll have time to mess with this at the moment. I will try to do a little research on this.

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