
Torillan |

Yes, the one in the free Player's Guide is layered, so you can just select and copy the map in Adobe Reader without the labels. Only the Player's Guide one works for this; for some unfathomable reason, the map in PF #1 has been flattened.
Thanks! I don't know why I didn't think of that.
I appreciate the help.

SJMiller |

Yes, the one in the free Player's Guide is layered, so you can just select and copy the map in Adobe Reader without the labels. Only the Player's Guide one works for this; for some unfathomable reason, the map in PF #1 has been flattened.
I just downloaded the free Player's Guide again, just to confirm this, and I could not do anything with layers in the Sandpoint map. Sadly, that appears to be changed. Either that or I am doing something terribly wrong.

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I just told my players that the the number son the map (they've all got hard-copies, so I can't change anything) were keyed to locations that might stand out, or that the players might interact with. There are no secrets revealed by the map and now when I run an encounter at a certain Inn or shop I can tell the players; "It's at no.X on the map." They're writing this stuff down and building there own players version of the sandpoint article.
I thought it looked bad at first but keyed locations on the PG map has turned out to be a boon.

Vivriel |

Same for me, I have a freshly downloaded Player's Guide and I can't select portions of the map. I can highlight the text on the map, though.
That is the precise proof that the map IS layered. If you can highlight the text labels on the map, it means the text is on a separate layer from the underlying map. You can select the map separately from the text, but because the map image takes up a full page, you need to do Ctrl-Click in Windows. (It's another combination on Mac, but I don't remember what.)
Once the image is highlighted, right click to Copy Image to the clipboard, then import it into a graphics viewer.