Mutta hyvin tehty julkaisu on tämä, Malcom Domen historiikkihaastattelu ja paljon kuvia. Lyriikoissa ei menetä tunnetusti mitään kyldyyriä, mutta ne olisivat voineet olla kruununa messissä. Ei sillä, että alkuperäisessä olisi ollut... muistaakseni 2 sivun "vihko"? Mutta debyytin nimen kannalta mielenkiintoinen knoppi tuli uutena vastaan: Black Demonin valmistuttua sessioiden lopuksi, jätettiin Purgatory albumilta pois & sehän julkaistiin vasta tuolla em. Ready For Boardingilla liveversiona!
edit: Rolfin haastattelussa metal-rules.comissa ohitetaan tätä saatavuusongelmaa aika tylysti:
Rolf: Well, after I did "Rogues en Vogue" and the tour following it, I started another project called Toxic Taste; just a fun project you know? It was not meant to be very successful or anything like that. We just did it because we wanted to. It was pretty much more of a punk, rock 'n' roll opera project so to speak. I figured out how easy it was to write the songs, because we could do anything we wanted to. The writing process for "Rogues en Vogue" was difficult for me, and I figured that I really needed a break. I, myself, said bye to Running Wild around 2006. Then, at the Wacken show in 2009, we said goodbye to the public, and the fans. In around 2010, some record companies came up with the idea to re-record some of the material from the first nine records, because they are no longer available; the ones who own the rights today won't put it out again. So, we came up with the idea to re-record a total of twenty songs on two disks. They said "Okay...now we need some bonus tracks" and I said "Well...I don't have any songs" because I had stopped doing Running Wild. I then told them "I have some ideas...bits and pieces...I'm going to try and write some songs". Like I said before, the first song I started writing was "Piece of the Action", and I thought the song was too strong to waste it on a bonus track. The second one I wrote is actually the second one on the album titled "Riding on the Tide", and it was done in half an hour or something like that. That's when I said "Okay, the song material that I am writing comes out so easy and so strong that I just can't waste them as bonus tracks". If I write four bonus songs, that's already half an album. If I write four more, I have a full album, so it made more sense to me, and to the record companies as-well. So I wrote a new album, because it felt right again, and because I regained my passion to do Running Wild. It was just the right thing to do.