I guess it's free, and so there can be no complaint about the value for the money.
But if this is an indication of the care and research they put into the products that they sell … well, no thank you.
Don't mean to be a nit-picker, but when you sell to wargamers, I would THINK that you would not make obvious errors. To wit:
1) If you offer 3D print files, and you tell me something is a US Army Sherman 76mm, please don't show me a picture of a British Sherman Firefly!
2) If you offer 3D print files, and you tell me something is a Sherman A1, please don't show me a picture of a welded-hull Sherman!
3) And by the way, there was no such thing as a "Sherman MA3276", unless you are suggesting that was a hull number or something. The tank you probably want to be putting in the scenario is an M4A3 76.
4) And the Sherman you mean by the reference "Sherman A1" is probably a Sherman M4A1, which would be an appropriate version for the 7th Army to use. But then again, from the picture it's pretty obviously a Sherman M4A4, which by the way WAS NOT USED BY THE US ARMY.
5) "4 Squads from Easy company" -- Hello? Easy company of … Easy company of the 7th Army? What does that even mean? A typical US numbered Army in 1945 would have had at least 36 different units identified as "Easy company". I mean, you name the German division, why not the American division? The 45th Division (of the Seventh Army) was pretty famous. But you couldn't even give us a corps, much less a division, a regiment, a battalion for that Easy company.
6) As to those units from "Easy company" -- in what formation were US Army Infantry squads equipped with just Carbines and grenades? Is this a company of cooks and clerks? No M1 Garands? No BAR? No bazookas?
7) And oh, by the way, the US Seventh Army (army numbers are spelled out in the US Army, not written using numerals) fought in SOUTHERN Germany, taking Nuremberg and Munich (in BAVARIA, not in the Ardennes!), a march in which it quite famously liberated the Dachau Concentration Camp complex. It then crossed into Austria. So you have the wrong US Army if you want to fight the last Tiger left over after the Bulge.
Maybe there could be a back-story to tell us why this particular combat mission was given to cooks and clerks, or mortar crews, or redball express truck drivers, or whatever. And why there are 4 squads -- more than 1 platoon, but less than 2 platoons, yet with no platoon or company commander(s). So GIVE US that back-story! That can make a scenario interesting, instead of just not believable.
Here's the thing -- if you want to throw some toys on the table on game day I have no criticism. But if you propose to make a business selling me WW2 wargaming stuff, I expect you to do more research than the one google search I did to verify my own answers after I typed this up.
Maybe other wargamers think differently…
-Mark
(aka: Mk 1)