Fantasy-adventure has always been the strength of this series, and you can see the collection upshift when going from the retrofuture/alt-history/pulp-emulation of "Death on the Moon" (an interesting experiment) to the more conventionally sword-and-sorcery of "The Battlefield of Keres".
I would totally read more of "Keres", which hit that nerd D&D spot in my heart (the part I managed to kill with cholesterol blockages). It and the Othan story were the picks of the collection.
"The Magelords of Ruach" was edged out. It's been a long time to complete the cliffhanger set up by "At the Feet of Neptune's Queen" in issue 1, and the story had some rough writing: "She cried out as the cords which bound her hands behind her cut into her wrists whilst the men dragged her roughly by the arms." That's quite a sentence.