Behold, my collection of freshly Printed-on-Demand Gazetteers, in all its radiant splendor!
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It's finally complete, after all these years of waiting! Nope, not a single book missing. No sir.
(Your collection might look...slightly different...from my own, though. And that's okay.)
We didn't get full color until the 2nd edition versions. The originals were all B&W except the maps. Unfortunately splitting the map into different pages makes it all but useless in the reprintsThe books were originally full-color, but the POD copies are printed in black-and-white (except for the full-color maps in the back, but I'll get to those). The images ended up printing in grayscale, so they look fuzzy and are a little hard to read:
As Glen says - the original books were also black and white. And those maps in the original are pretty obviously the same color maps but printed in greyscale and are also a bit muddy and a bit harder to read than they need to be (shelling out the money to make two versions of the map might not have been in the budget, but it would have made them much nicer). So it sounds like they might have successfully reproduced the original Five Shires reading experienceTo be honest? Not great. They vary from book to book, though. I assume you were referring to "The Five Shires"?
The books were originally full-color, but the POD copies are printed in black-and-white (except for the full-color maps in the back, but I'll get to those). The images ended up printing in grayscale, so they look fuzzy and are a little hard to read:
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I was extremely fortunate to purchase most of the Gazetteers (2nd edition, used, but not in bad condition) for $3 each in 1998, when the varsity roleplaying club lost their club room to more popular organisations. The dude who had taken custody of the club's library had no idea what he was doing and so I jumped on the opportunity to get my hands on those books. It would have cost a small fortune to have purchased them online and have them delivered, with me being out the states. I have since taken the fold-out maps and had them colour-copied to preserve the original. The colour copies-cost me more than the actual Gazetteers.We didn't get full color until the 2nd edition versions. The originals were all B&W except the maps. Unfortunately splitting the map into different pages makes it all but useless in the reprints
Nope, the items are all shipped together and you are charged shipping on the package as a whole. So you will save on shipping if you order several books at a time.Just out of curiosity, as I've never ordered a POD via the DM's Guild... if you were to order several POD items together, would you be charged shipping for each individual item? Or do you save on shipping if you order multiple items at the same time?
A fair question. The short answer is that I skipped it because I don't think it fits in the collection.Why did you skip Orcs of Thar?
As a long term fan of Mystara - I agree with everything you posted. I remember being a teen and thinking "some of this stuff is kind of offensive" when I read it even back in '88 as a teen (the Native American stuff was especially noticeable to me due to my upbringing).All that to say, I feel that The Orcs of Thar is too different to be included with the others, and should stand apart as its own work. (That, and I don't really care for "joke D&D" books.)