Warmachine & Threlm
You ever come across those old war maps that are saved in a custom markup from the 1940s? I’ve spent hours just re‑creating the hierarchy of troop movements in a .wmap file that’s basically a forgotten language. It’s like your battle plans, but written in a format that almost nobody uses anymore. Have you ever kept a relic like that for future reference?
I respect the effort. Old maps are like a field manual left behind—every line tells you how the front moved, what choices were made, what worked and what failed. Keeping that data safe is like keeping a trusted plan on a clipboard; it helps you anticipate the next move. Just make sure you document the syntax, so future crews can read it without breaking their legs. And if you can back it up in a modern format, you’ll avoid the risk of that .wmap file going dark. That’s how we survive on the front lines.