A day before the set was revealed, it was revealed that mono mixes had been supplied for the "All In The Body, All In The Mind" singlette, with hints of a lossless replacement download for said single. Many people didn't take notice until the set was released, when a majority of people gave the release low ratings due to this. Eventfully, on 21 November, 2012 ZTT offered a mail-order physical replacement disc to those who had purchased the set prior, by either sending them the mono disc or emailing a scanned copy of their receipt or other proof of purchase to Union Square Music's email address.
Tracks 1-5 form the original "All In The Body, All In The Mind" singlette. Tracks 1 and 5 are experts from Walter Kaufmann's 1967 translation of Friedrich Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy as read by Geoffrey Palmer, track 2 is the soundtrack to the shorter "Escape Act" version of the original promo clip, track 3 is the full version of their cover of T-Rex's "Get It On" and track 4 is a unique extended version of "Real Altered".
Tracks 7-12 form the original cassette release of the first "Power of Love" 12". Differences include Track 7 opening with an excerpt of T.S. Eliot's Four Quartets, tracks 9 and 11 having the usage of "fuck" and "shit" reversed and track 12 ending with two short unlisted tracks, which are merged into that track.
Tracks 6 and 13 are the original B-sides to the afromented singles. "Relax " was the live B-side of the "Real Altered" 12" and "The World Is My Oyster " was the B-side to the "Power of Love" 7".
Track 14 is an excerpt of "Don't Lose What's Left " which predicted "Roadhouse Blues" on the rare "Rage Hard" CD single.
Track 15 was originally released on the rare CD single release of "Rage Hard".
Track 1 is the first 12" mix of "Relax", infamous for its length, the slightly offensive lines present through Holly's rambling and not including the regular song.
Tracks 2, 5, 7 and 9 are interview excerpts that were only released on singlettes. Tracks 4 and 10 are spoken-dialogue tracks bridging the start and end "Two Tribes" singlette.
Track 6 is the second 12" mix of "Two Tribes".
Tracks 3 and 8 are the regular 12" cover B-sides to "Relax" and "Two Tribes" respectively.
Track 11 was originally released as a single-track CD single in 1986. Track 11.3 is a mix of the album version without vocals except in the chorus at the end.
Track 12 is a cover of Rod Stewart's "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?", first released in 2009 on the now-discontinued digital version of Frankie Say Greatest and is nowadays exclusive to this release. It was intended to be one of Warriors's planned B-sides, according to several sources.
Track 13 was originally released as one of the B-sides to "Watching The Wildlife", except unlike previous releases it is not combined with bits 1 and 2.