-babes- Katana Kombat - Mail Order -05.10.2018-... [ 99% ESSENTIAL ]

  1. The full forum post text for "Babes - Katana Kombat - Mail Order - 05.10.2018"?
  2. A repost/summary rewritten for social/media/blog use?
  3. A short promotional post (title + blurb) announcing that item/collection?
  4. Image captions or tags for a listing?

Pick one of 1–4 and I’ll produce it.

4. "05.10.2018"

The date format (day.month.year) suggests a European origin—likely the UK, Germany, France, or perhaps Australia. American catalogs typically use month/day/year.

October 5, 2018, was a Friday. In the world of direct mail, this could represent: -Babes- Katana Kombat - Mail Order -05.10.2018-...

Most intriguingly, it aligns with the tail end of the physical media era for adult/niché content. By late 2018, many mail-order operations were shuttering, pivoting to digital downloads, or selling their mailing lists to VPN providers and cannabis seed banks.

Cultural and Collectible Significance

Part 2: Context – The World of Late-2010s Mail-Order Adult/Action Hybrids

To understand what "-Babes- Katana Kombat" was, we must understand its ecosystem. Between 2012 and 2019, a shadow economy of direct-response television (DRTV) and catalog sales persisted for products that could not be easily monetized through mainstream online ads due to payment processor restrictions (e.g., Mastercard and Visa tightening rules on adult content in 2017–2018). The full forum post text for "Babes -

Companies like Vivid Entertainment (mainstream adult) had mail-order divisions. Smaller players included:

A product titled Katana Kombat would fit perfectly into AIP’s or a similar studio’s catalog: a one-off concept shot over two days in a warehouse using foam-rubber katanas, cheap kimonos, and a poorly recorded techno soundtrack. The "Babes" part likely meant two to four female performers with martial arts choreography minimal enough to not bruise skin. Pick one of 1–4 and I’ll produce it

The mail-order aspect was critical: customers would call an 800 number or fill out a tear-out coupon, send a money order or check, and 4–6 weeks later receive a DVD-R with a printed label. The customer experience was intentionally nostalgic—some buyers enjoyed the "hunt" more than the content.