Editing Vaporware

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The ComStar Sourcebook may be the most prominent example of BattleTech vaporware. Some people claim to have seen (or even held in their hands) a physical copy around ca. 1989 in shops in England, Canada and the US, describing it as "''a Housebook style Comstar book'' [...]''. It had the dark blue cover of a house book with the embossed emblem of Comstar and on the back it had the shiny monocolor Comstar logo''" and as "''house book sized but about half as thick''". This started a massive research thread on the [[CBT Forum]]<ref>In [http://www.classicbattletech.com/forumarchive/index.php/topic,67717.0.html this thread] (dead link) (archived)</ref> which, however, failed to turn up conclusive proof that such a book existed.
 
The ComStar Sourcebook may be the most prominent example of BattleTech vaporware. Some people claim to have seen (or even held in their hands) a physical copy around ca. 1989 in shops in England, Canada and the US, describing it as "''a Housebook style Comstar book'' [...]''. It had the dark blue cover of a house book with the embossed emblem of Comstar and on the back it had the shiny monocolor Comstar logo''" and as "''house book sized but about half as thick''". This started a massive research thread on the [[CBT Forum]]<ref>In [http://www.classicbattletech.com/forumarchive/index.php/topic,67717.0.html this thread] (dead link) (archived)</ref> which, however, failed to turn up conclusive proof that such a book existed.
  
Over the course of the thread, [[Line Developer]] [[Herbert A. Beas II]] explicitly said that the [[Catalyst Game Labs]] offices should have everything ever printed for BattleTech archived, but did not have that book; he concluded the book did not exist as an official product, though he also said that it was impossible for him to positively rule out its existence. On the theory that copies of a preproduction run exist, he explained {{quote|''that pre-release runs were pretty much a financial impossibility back in those days. When I came on board in 1995, FASA was just coming into the computer age for product design. In the late 80s, they were still performing layout by physically cutting and pasting pages together, and doing Honest to Cat typesetting. Those processes were tedious and more expensive in terms of time and manpower than what we have today with electronic methods. Print runs had to be large in order to have a chance of making profit at a per-unit rate. Print on Demand simply did not happen then, and short runs were seen as suicidal. This would suggest (to me) that the warehouse would thus have had a HUGE stockpile of leftover copy, and thus our archives should have had samples to draw from. Yet we cannot find any.''}}
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Over the course of the thread, [[Line Developer]] [[Herbert A. Beas II]] explicitly said that the [[Catalyst Game Labs]] offices should have everything ever printed for BattleTech archived, but did not have that book; he concluded the book did not exist as an official product, though he also said that it was impossible for him to positively rule out its existence. On the theory that copies of a pre-production run exist, he explained {{quote|''that pre-release runs were pretty much a financial impossibility back in those days. When I came on board in 1995, FASA was just coming into the computer age for product design. In the late 80s, they were still performing layout by physically cutting and pasting pages together, and doing Honest to Cat typesetting. Those processes were tedious and more expensive in terms of time and manpower than what we have today with electronic methods. Print runs had to be large in order to have a chance of making profit at a per-unit rate. Print on Demand simply did not happen then, and short runs were seen as suicidal. This would suggest (to me) that the warehouse would thus have had a HUGE stockpile of leftover copy, and thus our archives should have had samples to draw from. Yet we cannot find any.''}}
  
 
The author of the sourcebook that was published in 1992, [[Blaine Pardoe]], commented in the thread:
 
The author of the sourcebook that was published in 1992, [[Blaine Pardoe]], commented in the thread:

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