Thank you for posting this guide. I've only been using ISBoxer for a day, but as soon as I saw this guide I instantly realized just how powerful it can be. Utilizing a limited key set (like the G keys, or a Numpad in my case) one can have access to hundreds of different hotkeys that can do different things for different characters. It really is a brilliant idea. I look forward to seeing what Lax can do to incorporate it and make it even easier.
On that note it took me a while to figure out some of your steps and what they were for. Having not used the program much I didn't fully understand the method and logic behind the parts of the guide until I really thought hard about them. I think there could be a way to explain the thought process a little more between the steps. Mainly it would be answering things like the purpose of the different key maps and how they relate to each other. In the guide you tell us what to do, but not necessarily why. For example, you could explain why you have a "00: General Hotkeys" key map and how it relates to the overarching idea and purpose of the guide. The same with the "Clickbar: Combat" and "Virtual G15: Combat". Why did you need to create these two key maps, and how do they relate to each other and toward the eventual goal of having a visual and virtual menu of hotkeys to tab through?
Those were basically the questions I had to ask myself before the idea really started to make sense. Only after I started putting all the questions and answers together could I then start modifying the guide for my own characters. Also, in the last never-ending step you don't tell us where we have to "assign label text", nor do you tell us where to start creating our own Mapped Keys to eventually be used in our virtual key maps. I'm assuming you left an explanation of the "label text" out because a solid understanding of Click Bars would tell most people where they assign labels, but for a beginner like me it took a while to figure out what you meant and where I needed to change them.
It is an amazing guide, especially for people with a solid understanding of ISBoxer. For a newbie, it's still an amazing guide but a bit confusing at first read for the reasons I mentioned above. Still, thank you for putting it together! I know I'm going to be using it a lot as I set up my new boxed team.