Introduction
It is 1917. You are an American doughboy who has been drafted into the thick of World War I. For six months now, you have been fighting alongside fellow servicemen. You have experienced firsthand the atrocities of war: the conditions are poor, there is no place to take a shower, many of your comrades are infected with disease, you have been eating from expired cans of food, and rarely does an hour pass without thoughts of death. You and your comrades' sacrifices over the past six months, and who knows how much longer, have been in a miraculous effort to defend your country. You feel that you owe it to your fallen brethren that their stories be heard; you will not allow them to be one of the thousands of fallen brothers lost in combat and forgotten by history.