http://www.rpgnow.com/product/109631/Ol ... -%28PDF%29
The misrepresentation comes on page 5 of the preview:Description:
You may have heard of the Old School Renaissance, an enthusiastic movement that champions old-school gaming and old-school systems.
Here's the problem: there are dozens of old school rule sets. So which one should you try?
The Old School Renaissance Handbook profiles 16 different popular old-school systems, including their basic mechanics, character attributes, and advice for DMs and players. There's even a handy one-page table comparing all these systems on price and complexity.
Plus, the book stats out the same five first-level characters in all 16 systems. Compare systems easily, and quickly jump into a game with these pregens.
Here are the 16 systems covered in the book:
Adventurer Conqueror King System
BareBones RPG
Dungeon Crawl Classics
Dungeon Raiders
Dungeon Squad!
Dungeon World
Labyrinth Lord
Lamentations of the Flame Princess
Mazes & Minotaurs
Microlite74
Old School Hack
OSRIC
Searchers of the Unknown
Stars Without Number
Swords and Wizardry
Warrior, Rogue & Mage
And soon I'll release a 100-page hardback edition that will also include interviews with Kirin Robinson of Old School Hack, James Raggi III of Lamentations of the Flame Princess, Jason Morningstar of Dungeon Squad!, and Michael Wolf of Warrior, Rogue & Mage.
The author has apparently mixed up the beta (168 pages, Highest PC level = 5, etc, etc) with the core book ($19 PDF, $40 Print). There may be other mistakes; I didn't buy it, so I can't be sure.
I'm sure it was just a simple mistake, but since the purpose of the product is to aid readers in choosing which OSR game they should buy, that should probably be corrected. Just FYI.