Saturday, June 27, 2026

Icarus: It’s the Circle of Life

 

You may recall that last week, as we set off on an Arctic exploration mission, we asked a deeply philosophical question.

Who needs Zaph?

It was the kind of question asked by people who have recently survived a hostile alien planet, several bad decisions, and at least one journey through the frozen murder-latitudes without a proper appreciation for professional competence. The sort of question that sounds bold around a campfire and then, one week later, is found written on the official incident report under Cause of Delay: hubris.

It turns out — we do.

Zaph provides a very important function to the group: fast, phobia-free scouting. He goes where the rest of us do not wish to go, reports what the rest of us do not wish to find, and does it all with the emotional range of a man checking whether the bins have gone out. This is not glamorous work, but civilization is built on such foundations. That and the ability to not stop every three minutes because Craig has seen a cliff and would like to negotiate with gravity.

Just to compare progress: last week we completed 95% of an operation.

This week, we completed three operations.

In our defence, last week the devs screwed us over. This week, Myles made better choices.

These two facts may or may not be related. The official minutes remain inconclusive, mostly because Craig drew a ladder over them.

As we rejoin our intrepid adventurers, the party is gathered at a small lake shack. A temporary lake shack. The word temporary is important here, because Craig had to be reminded that not every structure requires three storeys, massive wooden pillars, all the tall trees in the forest, and a ladder system which appears to have been designed by an architect who had heard of stairs but considered them a moral failing.

Craig listened to this patiently, in the manner of a man who accepts feedback, absorbs feedback, and then immediately begins mentally pricing the timber.

Operation Arctic Exploration Concludes

Having blasted a hole in a rockfall so we could return to the Arctic region and explore it for exotics — which, as several people pointed out with the tired bitterness of men who have already walked through the snow once, we could have done the first time we were there — we cursed the corporate fat cats sitting around in form-fitting recliner couches, drinking coffee we had harvested, processed, packed, and shipped to space.

This is the true Icarus experience. Humanity has conquered orbital logistics and terraforming, but somehow still requires four men and several emotionally exhausted zebras to ride through a frozen deathscape because a spreadsheet in space has developed an appetite for minerals.

The zebras also had a few choice things to say about being made to travel through the snow again. They did not vocalise them in any specific human language, but their posture carried the unmistakable tone of a strongly worded workplace complaint.

Patch kept a sharp eye out for any sneaky oxite deposits that might have inimical intentions towards Myles. This was not paranoia. This was lived experience. Somewhere out there, among the icy rocks and glittering snow, there was probably an oxite deposit with Myles’s name on it, waiting like a geological assassin.

The rest of us kept an eye out for more likely threats: wolves, bears, bad weather, Craig discovering a ravine, Dave spotting harvestable reagents, and the general state of being on Icarus.

We rode to the spot on our map.

The mission completed.

That was it.

No grand confrontation. No dramatic last stand. No blizzard duel with an alpha predator. No desperate extraction under fire. Just arriving at a place we had already nearly arrived at last week, apparently pleasing the orbiting corporate gods sufficiently that they threw 600 dollars and an achievement at us for the brave act of being geographically present.

Sometimes there is an achievement just for showing up.

This, frankly, is the sort of game mechanic that encourages management consultants.

Dave suggested Myles dial up a new mission on the portable contact device.

Myles claimed he had left it back at the house.

There was a pause.

It was not a long pause, but it carried the emotional weight of several decades of friendship, compressed into the shared understanding that someone had forgotten the one device that lets us talk to space.

So it was back to Winchester to unload everything we had gathered. Dave and Craig took a side trip on the way back to unclog the waterwheels and collect resources, because even during retreat there is always infrastructure, and if Dave can find a moving part that needs maintenance, he will nurse it back to health like a tiny wooden patient.

Eventually, Myles dialled up another operation.

The previously mentioned corporate fat cats wanted materials to extend the space station.

Probably for coffee storage.

Operation: Space Station Upgrade

The operation clearly marked the drop-off locations on the map, which seemed promising. A map with marked objectives is normally a sign of progress, clarity, and a faint belief that the people designing the mission had met humans before.

However, the operation refused to inform us what we needed to deliver until we physically visited the location.

This is the Icarus devs’ idea of fun.

It is a philosophy of game design that says, “What if logistics, but with unnecessary mystery?” It is the sort of thing that looks sensible on a whiteboard until someone has to ride across three biomes to discover that the shopping list says fifty thousand oxygen, please.

Being ever so adept at avoiding time-wasting activity, we sent Zaph off with vague directions to ride across the desert and Riverland to find out what we needed and report back, while the rest of us spun up the industrial complex, stoked the forges, harvested coffee, and generally behaved like a deeply troubled start-up founder trying to scale production before the seed funding evaporated.

Also, if Zaph could sell our visage collection on the way, that would be helpful.

With no fanfare, no fuss, and no hour of preparation involving emergency sandwiches, spare walls, moral debate, and Craig asking whether the horse could climb that, Zaph hopped on his horse and headed out.

Before you could say “What is Craig up to now?” and get a coherent response, Zaph reported in.

We needed to deliver:

  • 350 glass

  • 250 concrete mix

  • 60,000 biofuel

  • 50,000 oxygen

There are moments in life when a list arrives and the human spirit lifts. This was not one of those moments.

We had 300 glass already, so that was almost civilized. We just needed silica for the remaining 50. Two hundred and fifty concrete was also manageable, in the way that moving a small hill from one place to another is technically manageable if you possess the right tools and have made peace with mortality.

So Craig was sent off to collect stone and silica.

This would have gone faster if Craig knew what silica looked like.

Hint: it’s the white stone in the sulphur cupboard.

This is the kind of sentence that only makes sense after many hours in a survival crafting game, when a group of grown adults can debate cupboard geology without embarrassment.

Myles asked how we were supposed to transport that much biofuel and oxygen. It turns out you can make a large biofuel tank, and we can simply order more oxygen tanks from the station, because apparently the corporation is stingy with information but happy to fire pressure vessels from orbit.

Myles made the biofuel tank and ordered nine extra oxygen tanks from the station.

Zaph was quiet.

Too quiet.

There is a particular silence that descends when Zaph is not reporting hostile movement, resource counts, or the tactical uselessness of the rest of us. It is the silence of a sniper who has gone off-script. When asked what he was doing, he made some vague mention of artwork.

Artwork.

It was like Craig was operating Zaph by remote control.

The thought was unsettling. Somewhere, perhaps, a tiny Craig sat inside Zaph’s tactical brain, pulling levers and whispering, “What if we made something unnecessary?”

After an hour spent fuelling the composter to make biofuel, plus some careful micromanagement to ensure we did not oversupply oxygen or biofuel — because nothing says heroic planetary frontier like inventory compliance — we were ready to go.

Patch sighed.

Myles had packed all the goods on Patch, clearly a sign that he understood the risks of trusting essential delivery to the easily distracted Dave and Craig. Dave might stop to harvest something useful. Craig might stop to improve a cliff. Neither is acceptable when one is transporting enough oxygen to briefly disappoint an accountant.

This led to Myles asking why his zebra was so slow.

It was only carrying a ton of cargo after all.

Patch did not answer, but there are silences in the animal kingdom that translate perfectly.

Craig took the opportunity to stop and mine every silica deposit we passed.

This was, technically, useful. It was also very Craig. A man can be sent for stone and return with half a biome, several questions, and possibly a new outbuilding.

We finally arrived at the first shipping site, and Myles loaded the biofuel and oxygen into the pod. The pod departed.

Myles watched it go and pondered if we would ever see our shiny green 150 litre biofuel tank again.

Nope.

Hasta la vista, baby.

The corporation had consumed it whole, like a vending machine that accepts equipment but does not dispense refunds.

Zaph arrived, relieved Patch of the glass and concrete, and set off on that delivery. No drama. No fuss. No poetic crisis. Just competence, which is deeply suspicious in this group and should probably be logged.

Bored, the rest of us hit up a nearby cave for some mining fun.

Which leads us neatly, and with all the elegance of a buffalo cart reversing into a wall, to the next operation.

Operation: Mining Mission

It turns out you cannot make a station extension without additional raw materials. This came as no surprise to anyone who has ever met Dave, who regards every object in the universe as either a building component, a future building component, or something getting in the way of a building component.

The fat cats dropped us some mining gear, along with a request for raw materials:

  • 250 iron

  • 300 copper

  • 350 gold

Whilst Zaph went to recover the mining equipment, we shut down our mine-smelting operation before all the raw iron had been converted into ingots. This required a level of restraint not often seen in our household industries. Somewhere, a furnace cooled. Dave probably felt it in his bones.

We had the iron ore we needed.

Zaph installed a gold extractor and fuelled it.

We set out to join him. With a few side trips along the way to mine copper, we gathered the remaining resources. It was almost efficient, which made everyone nervous.

The delivery pod was perched atop a small rock mesa. Naturally, Craig had arrived earlier and made a small hut in case of inclement weather.

At least, that was the official explanation.

Craig had recently made one of those important life decisions: to replace Dave as group architect.

This was perhaps because Dave’s constructions — house, farm, factory — were retained, expanded, maintained, and generally treated as useful parts of the world, whereas Craig’s were often scrapped for resources with the ceremony of a man quietly putting away a folding chair after a village hall meeting.

Craig, never one to exceed the requirements unless verticality is involved, had built a small footprint hut.

To meet his grandiose plans, he built up.

It was three storeys high, with a ladder adding another ten storeys.

This was a hut in the same way that the Tower of Babel was a community shed.

One imagines Craig standing at the bottom, gazing up through the ladder shaft and whispering, “Needs another floor.” Somewhere overhead, the game engine adjusted its posture and prepared the smiting paperwork.

We loaded 95% of the ore onto the pod, then called the station to extort more mining equipment.

Zaph began the performance.

“Oh woe is me,” he regaled the corporation, “my horse sank in the river and we lost all the mining equipment.”

The corporation promptly shipped down another set.

They really wanted the ore.

Myles was amazed and looked lovingly at the exotic-infused pickaxe they delivered, which could recover 33% more ore from a deposit.

Zaph sheepishly muttered, “I should have been using that on the gold.”

Patch sighed.

Craig added another ladder on the roof.

Myles added a beacon so Craig could find his way back to the house.

This was not mockery. It was safety infrastructure. There comes a point where a man has constructed so much vertical nonsense that he needs navigational assistance to leave his own bad idea.

Myles called the Corporation again.

“Oh woe is me, my Zebra ate the extractor…”

Patch gave Myles the stinkeye.

The corporation dropped another load of mining equipment.

At this point, it became clear that the corporation has very strong views on raw material delivery and very weak views on fraud prevention. Somewhere in orbit, a procurement officer was either asleep, automated, or called Craig.

We put the last 30 gold in the pod and shipped it off.

Another operation complete.

Morale rose. Confidence surged. The dangerous illusion of competence began to settle over the group like a fine dust.

Naturally, we decided to do another operation.

Operation: Locate Exotics

Things were going so well that we decided to press our luck.

Apparently, defying gravity requires exotics.

Lots of exotics.

It is like the devs have watched Avatar and concluded that unobtainium was a little too subtle.

For simple resource extraction, the corporation will happily drop equipment from orbit. Need a mining rig? No problem. Need oxygen tanks? Certainly. Need replacement gear because a horse allegedly sank in a river? Why not, brave employee. Need another extractor because a zebra supposedly ate the first one? Plausible enough. Enjoy your pod.

But for challenging work, we have to build everything ourselves.

This is because corporations believe in self-reliance, especially when it saves them money.

We needed to make a radar to find an exotic deposit, then make an extractor to mine said exotics. Luckily, everything we needed was at Winchester.

All the way back at Winchester.

Across an Arctic landscape filled with scary oxite deposits.

The word luckily began to feel less accurate under scrutiny.

“Or we could just make it here,” explained Dave, rubbing his hands with the gleeful cheer of a man contemplating another industrial outpost.

This sentence landed in the camp like a match in a fireworks cupboard.

Dave continued. “We can start with a crafting bench, which just needs some fibre, wood and stone. Then we can make an anvil, with 40 ingots, then a machinery bench, which will need iron nails and concrete. We will need a concrete furnace to smelt gold, which will need a concrete mixer, and the mixer needs refined wood, so we need a carpentry bench…”

The list went on.

And on.

And on.

This is Dave in his natural habitat: standing beside a temporary hut, calmly explaining why the logical solution to one missing radar is the construction of a regional manufacturing hub.

“That sounds like we need an extension,” said Craig, rubbing his hands together gleefully as he noted Dave’s distraction.

There are few sights more dangerous than Dave planning industry and Craig hearing the word extension. One sees inputs and outputs. The other sees height.

Still, it was better than a trip back through the Arctic, so we set to work.

Myles checked the map and noted we were not that far from our original base. This raised the possibility that we could shortcut the process by reclaiming some machinery from that base rather than rebuilding the entire industrial revolution from pebbles and ambition.

Zaph made the trip to investigate.

The work began.

  • Myles put out two MXC furnaces and started converting copper and iron ore into ingots.

  • Zaph recovered a concrete mixer, which saved a whole lot of intermediary steps.

  • Dave installed the machining bench.

  • Craig expanded the outpost.

That last bullet point contains multitudes.

Some men see a functional worksite and think, “Good, this will serve the mission.” Craig sees a functional worksite and thinks, “What if it had another room no one asked for?”

With the radar made, Dave suggested we set up hedgehogs around it to protect it from wild animals attacking it.

“What hedgehogs?” asked Myles.

“The hedgehogs from the adventure cupboard I asked you to pack,” replied Dave.

“You said someone should pack those,” Myles responded. “You didn’t ask me to pack them.”

Dave sighed.

Stripes sighed.

Dave made a note: Craig is not the only person requiring explicit instructions.

This was an important moment of personal growth. For years, the group had assumed Craig was the operational weak point in any instruction-dependent process. But Icarus, like all great teachers, revealed a deeper truth: ambiguity is the enemy, and “someone” is not a logistics plan.

Dave turned on the machinery bench to make hedgehogs.

“Craig, I need more wood!” he yelled.

Craig, who had presumably been waiting his entire life to hear those words in the context of an expanding outpost, sprang into action.

With the radar installed, Dave set out the hedgehogs and switched it on.

Animals attacked.

Craig died.

“Never happened,” said Craig. “Could someone rez me.”

Dave took a photo, because sometimes you need photographic evidence.

This is especially important with Craig, whose relationship with causality is often adversarial. If there is no screenshot, Craig considers the incident theoretical.

Dave made a masonry bench for Craig so he could upgrade the outpost to stone. He did not have the heart to tell Craig we were never coming back here after tonight.

Also, a masonry bench is a fairly safe distraction.

This is an underrated leadership technique. Some people respond to praise. Some people respond to structure. Craig responds to being given a bench and a material palette, whereupon he can be safely contained for several minutes like a raccoon with a puzzle feeder.

The radar identified a nearby exotic deposit, so Myles made an extractor, then he and Zaph went off to install it.

Myles returned to make a second extractor and collect the orbital exchange board to speed up delivery. He then jumped on a zebra and headed back to Zaph.

Dave noted his oxygen tank was only 70% full, so he installed an oxite extractor in the house and headed out to do some mining.

Dave paused.

“Stripes?”

There was a silence.

“Where is Stripes?”

He looked around.

There were two people at the outpost, and two zebras in the yard.

Dave did the math.

This was not difficult math, but it was emotionally loaded math.

“Myles — which Zebra are you riding?” he asked over the radio.

“Patch!” Myles responded.

Patch looked at Dave and sighed.

“Check again,” Dave suggested.

There was a burst of suspiciously convenient radio interference.

“Pshssht, fizz@#t, Psshh you are breaking up,” called Myles.

“BRING BACK MY ZEBRA!!!” yelled Dave.

“In my defence, they all look the same,” replied Myles.

Patch sighed.

There are many accusations one can level against Myles. Bad mission planning, perhaps. Occasional fire mismanagement. A dangerous willingness to trust corporate logistics. But zebra misidentification is a new low, and Patch took it personally on behalf of the entire striped community.

Finally, the exotics were mined and shipped.

We packed up all the useful things and headed back to Winchester.

We still didn’t tell Craig we were never coming back.

There seemed no need to hurt him. Let a man believe in his stone outpost. Let him imagine future generations of prospectors sheltering there, admiring the craftsmanship, wondering why there is a ladder reaching toward the indifferent heavens. Let him dream.

Tonight’s Campfire Song: The Circle of Icarus

Gather round the fire, assuming Myles has not set it to the house again.

Tonight’s campfire song takes inspiration from the noble cycle of existence on Icarus: arrive, build, overbuild, ride through danger, feed the biofuel machinery, steal the wrong zebra, and eventually discover that space management would like another shipment of things they could absolutely have told us about earlier.

The Circle of Icarus

On the morning we land in the drop pod,
Blinking hard at the murderous sun,
There are rocks to be mined,
And cupboards to find,
And three more jobs not yet begun.

Zaph says, “Shoot it before it gets closer.”
Dave says, “This needs a bench and a flue.”
Craig says, “That cliff looks structurally interesting.”
Myles says, “Please no, we have things to do.”

It’s the circle of Icarus,
It’s the wheel of coffee and pain,
It’s the zebra that’s stolen,
The ladder that’s swollen,
And the trip through the snow once again.

It’s the biofuel treadmill,
It’s the oxygen grind,
It’s a pod taking off
With our best shiny tank
And leaving no refund behind.

Zaph rides over the horizon,
Reports back before we can swear,
Craig builds a hut
With a ladder on top,
For reasons best left in the air.

Dave makes another outpost,
Myles pretends this was in the plan,
Patch gives a sigh
As the cargo stacks high,
And Stripes gets borrowed by the wrong man.

It’s the circle of Icarus,
It’s the path where the good sense goes,
Through the snow and the sand,
With a pickaxe in hand,
While the corporation harvests what grows.

And when the night falls on Winchester,
And the zebras are finally fed,
We count up the loot,
Argue over the route,
And ask what Craig built overhead.

It’s the circle of Icarus,
It’s the wheel of fortune and strife,
Till we find our place,
In the corporate disgrace,
In the circle, the circle of life.

Did We Learn or Achieve Anything This Week?

We learned that things operate faster when Zaph is around.

This should not have been surprising, but some lessons need to be repeatedly beaten into the group with a stick labelled evidence. With Zaph on scouting duty, missions become shorter, objectives become clearer, and there is significantly less wandering about while everyone debates whether the thing on the horizon is a threat, a tree, or Craig.

We learned that if you need an exploit, ask Dave.

This is not to imply that Dave is dishonest. Dave simply has a refined understanding of systems, incentives, and how to phrase a fictional disaster involving a drowned horse in such a way that an orbital corporation sends replacement mining equipment without asking awkward follow-up questions.

We learned that Myles should not be trusted with fire.

This lesson appears in the notes without much elaboration, which is perhaps for the best. Some incidents are best left as smoke damage, a cleared throat, and everyone quietly moving the flammable items away from Myles.

We learned that Myles thinks all zebras look the same.

This was not well received by Patch. Or Stripes. Or, one suspects, the broader zebra community.

We learned that Dave thinks Myles’s name is Someone.

This is because Dave said someone should pack the hedgehogs, and then later appeared surprised when the hedgehogs had not, in fact, packed themselves. From this we learned that in Dave’s operational vocabulary, “someone” means Myles, unless the task involves mining stone, building vertically, or finding danger, in which case it means Craig.

Last week, we said to tune in to see if Craig reverts to normal.

Nope.

He has morphed into an almost helpful team member.

This is worrying in a way that ordinary failure is not. We know how to handle Craig being chaotic. We have procedures. We have warning signs. We have ladders we refuse to climb. But Craig being helpful introduces uncertainty into the system. What if he becomes reliable? What if he builds something that remains useful? What if he reads instructions? The mind recoils.

Last week, we asked whether Myles could redeem his operation-planning reputation.

So close.

If only he had not left the contact device behind.

And the hedgehogs.

And the water filter.

A near-perfect recovery, tragically undone by small details such as equipment, preparation, and remembering the things one needs.

Last week, we asked whether Dave could stop cracking oxite jokes.

Nope.

Come on.

You knew that was never going to happen.

Weekly Achievements

Dave achieved: Fast Talker
Convince Myles that an industrial outpost makes sense.

This is a significant achievement, because Myles normally reacts to Dave saying “we can just build it here” the same way a finance department reacts to the phrase “minor scope expansion.” And yet, there we were, building an industrial outpost in the wilderness because apparently crossing the Arctic was worse.

Myles achieved: Thief
Borrow Dave’s zebra.

Patch is not impressed.

Nor is Stripes.

Nor, apparently, is Dave.

Myles also achieved: Fired!!
Set the house on fire.

There are many ways to leave a mark on a community. Some people build. Some people scout. Some people mine. Myles chose heat.

Craig achieved: Bob the Builder
Build an outpost.

More accurately, Craig built an outpost, expanded the outpost, upgraded the outpost, prepared the outpost for a future no one intended to have, and possibly laid the spiritual foundations for a tourist attraction called Craig’s Mesa of Questionable Purpose.

Zaph achieved: Time Saver
Reduced mission time sinks by 80%.

Zaph’s contribution this week was simple: ride out, discover what the mission actually wanted, report back, deliver things, and generally remove the need for the rest of us to make five separate trips under increasingly bitter circumstances.

It was efficient.

It was professional.

It was deeply unlike us.

And that, in the end, is the circle of life on Icarus.

The corporation demands. Dave builds. Zaph scouts. Craig expands. Myles plans, forgets something important, and steals the wrong zebra. Patch sighs. Stripes files a complaint. The pod takes our best equipment into space and never returns it.

Then we gather at Winchester, warm ourselves by the fire, and prepare to do it all again next week.

Assuming the house is still there.









Saturday, June 20, 2026

Icarus: The Arctic Shortcut That Wasn’t

 


Icarus: Who Needs Zaph?

Zaph was away this week.

This was suspicious.

Not suspicious in the ordinary sense, where someone has merely failed to attend a Friday night gaming session due to real life, family obligations, fatigue, or the deeply unreasonable expectation that adults occasionally do things other than sit in front of computers pretending to be competent. No. This was suspicious in the CCF sense, where the absence of the group’s tactical sniper coincided perfectly with the arrival of firearms manufacturing, industrial oil processing, experimental logistics, arctic survival planning, and the sort of mission briefing that should legally require a grown-up.

Unfortunately, the grown-up was Myles.

So, naturally, the evening began with therapy.

Agrizoophobia, or Why the Local Wildlife Now Has a Budget Line

Myles had developed what the professionals probably call Agrizoophobia, assuming the professionals are willing to take a phone call that begins with, “So, in this alien survival game, the elephants keep trampling the medic.”

The condition had not appeared spontaneously. It had been carefully cultivated over several weeks by Icarus’s charming local fauna, which had trampled Myles with wild elephants, stung him with scorpions, bitten him with cougars, and, worst of all, subjected him to the laughing mockery of hyenas.

The hyenas were the real tipping point.

There is something deeply personal about being laughed at by a creature that has just decided your ankles are a tapas menu. Wolves bite. Cougars ambush. Scorpions sting. Elephants flatten you in the same businesslike manner that Dave flattens a biome for a house extension. But hyenas? Hyenas editorialise.

Dave, being the group’s Den Mother, house builder, farmer, accidental quartermaster, industrialist, and heavily armed therapist, proposed a cure.

Overwhelming close-combat firepower.

Specifically, submachine guns loaded with incendiary rounds.

Because nothing says “please respect Myles’s personal space” like 400 flaming bullets per minute.

This was, in many ways, a very Dave solution. It was practical, dramatic, expensive, and required turning large portions of the base’s industrial output into portable wildlife discouragement. It also had the added benefit of letting Dave explain gun logistics, resource chains, and ammunition production while Myles stood there quietly calculating how many dead cougars it would take before the nightmares stopped.

Then Myles saw the cost of incendiary bullets.

The flaming vengeance dream died immediately.

Myles baulked at the price, because apparently trauma has limits when measured in sulphur, copper, and the crushing opportunity cost of not being able to make some other absurd machine Dave refuses to explain yet. So the grand plan was downgraded from “rain of cleansing fire” to stock standard 9mm instruments of death.

Less biblical, perhaps, but still emotionally useful.

Project Uzi

The operation was immediately named Project Uzi, because “Project Reasonable Personal Defence Device” lacked poetry and also because no one in this group should ever be allowed near a weapons procurement committee.

We turned half our iron ingots into ammo casings.

Half.

There was a moment — not a long one, but definitely a moment — where the base’s entire industrial future could be heard sobbing softly from inside the smelter. Iron ingots, which could have become structural supports, machine parts, tools, replacement bits, or sensible infrastructure, were instead pressed into tiny metal promises that said, “Dear wildlife, please reconsider your life choices.”

Myles researched various types of bullets, submachine guns, and assault rifles. This raised the obvious question, because even in a group with Craig, some questions remain unavoidable.

Why was Myles getting an Uzi, and Dave getting an M16?

Dave explained the matter with the calm certainty of a man who had spent far too long thinking about Myles’s panic radius.

“Myles, you panic when the wildlife gets close, so you need something designed for close combat – hence the Uzi.”

This was hurtful, accurate, and therefore the worst kind of group feedback.

“Whereas I prefer to stop the critters before they get close – hence the M16.”

Dave then clarified that the M16 used 5.56 rounds and had the stopping power of a wet paper bag, but it was the thought that counted. This was reassuring in the same way being handed a paper umbrella during a meteor strike is reassuring.

The next problem was gunpowder.

In the real world, gunpowder uses three ingredients. In Icarus, however, we use what can only be described as civil war gunpowder with the quality assurance standards of a medieval apothecary having a difficult morning. It requires only sulphur and charcoal, which are then ground together in the same mortar and pestle we use to make absolutely everything else.

Without cleaning it.

Because in space, no one cares if your gun explodes in your hand.

Myles went to the closest sulphur mine and noted there was no extractor. This was a sensible observation made by a responsible adult. Myles then returned to Winchester to get an extractor, because planning and logistics are the difference between civilisation and Craig.

Myles arrived back at the site to find there was, in fact, already an extractor.

It just had no fuel.

This is a special category of Icarus disappointment. Not the clean failure of “we forgot the machine,” nor the dramatic failure of “Craig has led the bears home again,” but the banal administrative failure of “the machine was present and merely starving quietly in the wilderness.”

So Myles refuelled it.

It had no resources to collect.

Of course it didn’t.

Having achieved one complete loop of logistical futility, Myles then travelled to our other sulphur mine, the one a long way south, where it contained only 37 sulphur. This strongly suggested that Dave had forgotten to refuel it the last time he was there, which is the kind of conclusion one reaches carefully, scientifically, and with a small note in the mental filing cabinet labelled “Things to Bring Up Later When Dave Mentions Myles Forgetting Something.”

Myles also found a sulphur mine doing nothing at the lakehouse, so he installed a mine there as well.

We now had three sulphur mines running.

This was either strategic redundancy or the opening phase of a resource network so convoluted it would eventually require its own town planner and a moral inquiry.

Myles then inspected the charcoal cupboard.

The situation was grim.

We were down to 10,000 charcoal.

To most people, 10,000 charcoal would represent an obscene quantity of partially burned tree. To CCF, it was a crisis. A cupboard containing only 10,000 charcoal is not a cupboard. It is a warning sign. It says civilisation is three mammoth attacks away from reverting to pointed sticks and harsh language.

So Myles put more wood in the fireplace and started the firepits.

The alternative was Craig burning down a forest with a flamethrower, which was emotionally satisfying but economically inferior. A tree will produce about 600 wood, which can then be turned into 600 charcoal. Burn the tree down, however, and you only get a couple of hundred charcoal, plus Craig standing nearby with an expression that suggests the scientific method has gone exactly as planned.

Meanwhile, Dave headed north to perform maintenance on our platinum, iron, and titanium mines. This involved checking the waterwheels and collecting the resources, because Dave’s industrial empire does not run on dreams. It runs on rotating infrastructure, suspiciously heavy bags, and his absolute refusal to let a resource node live in peace.

Back at Winchester, Myles made ammo casings, gunpowder, titanium plates, and finally a submachine gun with 9mm rounds.

For Dave, Myles made an assault rifle with the previously mentioned pissant 5.56 rounds.

The revolution had arrived.

It had mediocre stopping power, but it had arrived.

Oils Ain’t Oils

While the firearms program lurched into existence, Dave continued feeding rotting plants and dead fish into the biofuel thingies to turn them into oil.

This is one of those sentences that sounds appalling until one remembers it is also the foundation of our current industrial base.

We had 125 litres of oil, which meant the industrial complex was doing its thing. Its thing, apparently, was transforming old salad and deceased aquatic life into the black blood of progress. All we needed was 30 more litres and we could make a Polymerizer.

No one was entirely sure why we needed a Polymerizer.

This is common with Dave.

Dave does not explain industrial ambitions early. He simply stares into a crafting tree with the expression of a man receiving prophecy. Then, three hours later, everyone discovers that the base now contains an electrical substation, a masonry wing, and a machine that requires five different fluids to produce a component whose purpose remains classified.

Eventually, the oil target was reached.

Myles researched the Polymerizer, built it, installed it, wired it up, and added an advanced battery pack so it could churn out plastic 24/7.

Dave refused to say why we needed plastic.

This was not comforting.

Plastic, in Dave’s hands, is never just plastic. It is a prelude. It is the opening tremor before the mountain starts making machinery noises. Somewhere in Dave’s head, a spreadsheet had smiled.

Soy – The Wonder Plant

Dave then discovered that soybeans were not merely edible, profitable, and annoyingly numerous. They could also make milk.

This was already alarming.

Then he discovered they could be used to make vegetable oil.

This was worse.

Vegetable oil, it turned out, was a key ingredient for guns.

The soybeans had crossed a line.

Once a crop can participate in both breakfast and ammunition, it ceases to be agriculture and becomes logistics. One moment it is humble soy. The next, it is part of an arms supply chain. This is how empires begin: not with a flag, but with Dave saying, “Actually, the beans have strategic value.”

It should be noted that you can even eat soybeans if desperate.

Addendum: Dave is never that desperate.

Coffee Cropping

Dave asked Craig to water the plants.

Craig noted that he was perfectly capable of managing menial farm tasks and did not need to be micro-managed by Dave.

This was a bold statement.

A risky statement.

A statement that immediately filed paperwork with fate.

Ten minutes later, Dave observed that the plants had still not been watered. This prompted much mockery from both Myles and Dave regarding Craig’s ability to do menial work on time.

Craig, who operates best when the task involves jumping over something, falling off something, dismantling something structurally necessary, or alerting fauna to our location, had apparently found watering plants beneath him.

This did not stop him from escalating the operation.

Craig installed lights in the coffee farm so he could work 24/7 as slave labour for Dave.

It was unclear whether this was an act of contrition, rebellion, or Stockholm syndrome. The important thing was that the coffee farm now had lighting, and Dave’s agricultural-industrial complex had acquired a night shift.

Then came a wonder of wonders.

Craig put the coffee in bags packaged for delivery to the vendor.

Correctly.

This was such a rare moment of functional task completion that the group did not speak too loudly in case it frightened the event and caused it to revert into normal Craig behaviour. We will not even mention the bag of soybeans.

Tonight’s coffee production yielded 665 Ren.

Clearly, the Icarus developers have a serious caffeine addiction, and Dave spends far too much time on spreadsheets optimising production. There are entire historical economies less thoroughly analysed than Dave’s coffee pipeline. Somewhere, an accountant looked at Dave’s farm and whispered, “Too far.”

Craig’s Unauthorised Projects

While Craig was farming, Myles pointed out that animals were still crossing the causeway.

This was a problem.

The causeway had once been a triumph of landscape domination. It allowed safe crossing, efficient travel, and, apparently, free animal transit. Nature had interpreted it not as infrastructure but as an invitation.

Craig ran over to check.

“It’s only a rabbit,” he noted.

Dave was not reassured.

“Rabbits eat crops, and attract wolves,” Dave replied.

This is exactly the kind of sentence that sounds ridiculous until Icarus proves it true. In Icarus, all ecological relationships lead eventually to wolves. Rabbits attract wolves. Noise attracts wolves. Silence attracts wolves. Existing, in a slightly wolf-adjacent way, attracts wolves.

Myles suggested that Craig do something about it.

The obvious Dave solution was to do some research, set up an automated turret, wire that up to the grid, give it plenty of ammo, and let it deal with the animals. As a side benefit, a project like that would generate a lot of XP.

This is how Dave thinks.

A rabbit crosses a bridge; Dave designs a powered defensive perimeter.

The Craig solution was simpler.

Remove the causeway.

This was not what Dave wanted.

Dave was unhappy with low-tech solutions and complained that he now had to ride all the way around the lake to get home. It is difficult to overstate how tragic this was for Dave, a man who had just advocated researching and powering a turret to murder rabbits rather than accept a slightly longer commute.

It is like Craig just cannot win sometimes.

Strangely, the huge amount of stone used in the construction of the causeway had vanished.

Shortly thereafter, Craig complained that he was dead.

Coincidence?

We think not.

Myles performed the usual Craig rescue, because somewhere in the role description for “Base Support & Medic” there is apparently a clause reading, “Recover Craig from foreseeable consequences.”

This was followed by a trip to the vendor to sell our coffee production, because even after unauthorised civil engineering and probable stone-related mortality, capitalism waits for no man.

The Arctic Trip, or Dave Invents Coffee and Myles Gets a New Phobia

With the guns made, the farm running well, the oil production doing whatever dark industrial work Dave had planned for it, and the Polymerizer sitting there producing mystery plastic for reasons Dave refused to reveal, we decided it was time to do an actual operation.

An operation.

A job.

One of those things the people in space send you down to do, presumably because they enjoy watching ground crews discover preventable problems in real time.

Myles dialled up an operation to unlock a path to the Arctic.

The instructions were clear: travel to the site marked on the map, get the mining equipment that had been dropped from space, open a pass to the Arctic zone, and explore the new zone.

Easy peasy.

A mission we could do while Zaph was asleep.

This assumption should have been written on a plaque and mounted above the door of Bad Ideas Hall.

Dave noted that hypothermia could be a problem.

This was useful. This was sensible. This was exactly the sort of thought that occurs before a group of people ride zebras into snow country with guns and the collective planning discipline of a pirate council.

Everyone made sure they had heated bandages.

Dave then remembered that water canteens helped cool you. This was great in the desert, but perhaps not ideal for an Arctic trip unless the plan was to become a decorative corpse. Hot drinks, therefore, seemed wise.

So Dave went to the stove.

The stove had been installed years ago.

It had never actually been used.

This is a perfect example of CCF base design. We possess entire rooms full of machines built because one day we might need them. Some machines sit quietly for months, awaiting their moment. Others hum ominously despite no one understanding what they do. The stove, dusty and neglected, had finally received its call to greatness.

Dave added coal.

Dave’s eyes lit up at the plethora of hot beverage options.

Hot chocolate.

Tea.

Coffee.

“Hey,” Dave yelled, “we can make coffee.”

This produced an immediate crisis.

Do we sell the coffee beans for money, or make life-saving coffee for an arctic mission?

Dave thought.

Dave agonised.

Dave attempted fraud.

He tried to cheat by using coffee seeds instead of beans, but the stove cannot be fooled. The stove, despite years of neglect, possessed the moral clarity of a customs officer and the patience of a disappointed teacher. Seeds are not beans. Beans make coffee. Seeds make Dave sad.

Finally, he gave in and made a shiny new thermos, because there is no point in making hot coffee if it does not stay hot.

Myles jumped the queue by putting his canteen in the first slot, thus stealing the first coffee run.

Dave was not impressed.

Craig, excited at the idea of hot beverages, ordered a shiny new canteen from space.

Thankfully, they do not charge for delivery.

Finally, we reached that sacred time of night where we spent an hour preparing for a trip into untamed territory, the great unknown, the blank edge of the map, the place where sensible people take inventory and idiots say, “It’ll be fine.”

We had done this so many times before that we had it down to an art form.

The process involves Myles going through the storage cupboard and weighing the pros and cons of each piece of equipment while everyone else slowly loses the will to live.

On the approved list:

  • Beds, campfire, one MCX furnace.

  • Hedgehogs.

  • Prebuilt supplies to make a hut.

  • Wood, charcoal, food.

  • Orbital exchange board.

  • Beacon.

  • Guns and ammunition.

  • A shiny new set of decent armour for Myles from the space station.

  • Mounts, meaning zebras, because apparently hearty desert transportation was exactly what the Arctic demanded.

On the reject list:

  • Dehumidifier.

  • Portable power generator with biofuel.

  • Lights.

  • Wiring tool.

  • Firepit.

This list would later become important.

Not in the way lists are supposed to become important, where the items you pack help you, and the items you reject are unnecessary. More in the CCF way, where the rejected items come back like ghosts in a Greek tragedy, each wearing a nametag that says “Myles said no.”

We set off like famous adventurers of old.

Scott.

Shackleton.

Oates.

Yup, just like them. So much like them, in fact, that we considered renaming our characters, but could not agree who would be Hall & Oates.

We checked the map. Our target location was clearly marked.


The route appeared simple. Ride south a bit, head through the pass, enter the snowy region, and ride a long way through the snow to the target location.

Expected challenges: polar bears and bad weather.

This was a pleasingly short list.

Icarus immediately expanded it.

As soon as we entered the snow, we encountered unexpected challenges: snow cougars and snow wolves, but not a single polar bear. We fled on our zebras, whose dainty hooves were designed exactly not for these conditions, straight into a giant scorpion ambush.

It was like the wolves had planned it.

This is the sort of thing that sounds paranoid unless one has played Icarus. The wolves do not merely chase. They coordinate. They herd. They flank. They attend seminars. Somewhere, deep in the snow, a wolf with a clipboard was ticking off “drive idiots toward scorpions” as a successful training exercise.

And these were not modest scorpions.

These were giant scorpions the size of ponies.

In the Arctic.

Giant scorpions.

In snow.

There are design decisions, and then there is someone at RocketWerkz looking at a frozen biome and saying, “You know what this needs? Venomous armoured nightmares with pincers.”

Luckily, Dave was riding ahead pretending to be Zaph, so we managed to avoid the scorpion trap.

This was a little unsettling. Dave being tactical is not unheard of, but Dave being Zaph-adjacent suggested either character growth or a temporary tear in the fabric of group identity.

Then Myles saw something.

“Look out for that nest,” Myles yelled as he rode past Dave, gesticulating in sheer terror.

“What nest?” asked Dave, looking around.

“The blue one on the ground,” yelled Myles, pointing.

This was like waving a red flag to a bull, assuming the bull was Dave and the red flag was a possibly dangerous alien object that needed poking.

Dave rode over to get a better look.

“This one?” he asked, pointing at the ground.

“Yes,” Myles responded, kicking Patch to make him go faster.

“This oxite deposit?” Dave queried, kicking it with his foot.

There was a pause.

Then Dave said, “Oh noes, quick flee before the scary oxygen overwhelms us.”

Dave burst into laughter.

Even Stripes was amused.

There was dead silence from Myles.

Thus began Myles’s newly developed Petraphobia, treated immediately as a running joke by true friends, the sort of friends who do not help you up so much as write your new weakness on the group whiteboard in permanent marker.

To placate Myles, we added oxite deposits to our list of things to avoid in the Arctic.

The list now read:

  • Polar bears.

  • Wolves.

  • Giant scorpions.

  • Oxite.

  • Bad weather.

  • Hypothermia.

It was a good list. It had range. It covered both genuine threats and embarrassing misunderstandings.

We made an impromptu weather stop when the region decided that being hunted by incorrectly placed scorpions was not enough. Craig repaired a small wooden hut so we could all huddle around two campfires to avoid a blizzard.


The zebras stood outside in the snow.

We were very surprised to find them still alive after the storm passed.

This says a great deal about Icarus animal husbandry. The humans require heated bandages, coffee, shelter, tactical planning, and emergency firepits. The zebras stand in a blizzard looking vaguely annoyed, then continue on as if nothing happened.

Finally, having shrugged off the worst the region could throw at us — giant scorpions, blizzards, oxite — we arrived at the target location.

And there it was.

The intel was good.

A landslide had blocked the pass from the river region to the Arctic region.

“Oh Snap,” Dave thought.

Or possibly said. With Dave it can be hard to tell, because the emotional range between “interesting construction opportunity” and “catastrophic planning failure” is narrow but intense.

Craig looked around.

“Why are we here?” asked Craig.

“It’s our mission,” explained Myles. “We need to reopen the pass so we can explore the arctic region.”

Craig looked around again.

“This arctic region, the one we are standing in?” queried Craig.

Dave, Myles, Stripes, and Patch shared a look.

This was not a small administrative wrinkle.

This was a full mission-shaped farce.

We had travelled through the Arctic in order to unlock access to the Arctic.

Perhaps, if we talked fast enough, we could confuse Craig and cover up the complete fiasco this mission had just become.

“All we need is the equipment that was dropped, to open this pass, then we can go home to a nice warm beverage,” Myles said.

“Where is the equipment?” asked Craig.

Dave was puzzled.

Who had kidnapped Craig and replaced him with a Craig that asked the questions Zaph would normally ask?

Dave looked at the map.

“It’s just over here,” he noted, pointing at the map.

“Where exactly is that?” Craig asked.

“On the other side of this rockfall,” Dave responded, as the mission all fell apart.

There are moments in every expedition where the air changes. The light dims. The music stops. Somewhere, a narrator clears his throat and prepares to describe an avoidable disaster.

Craig, suddenly and horrifyingly lucid, summarised the situation.

“So, just so I am clear, we need to dig through this rockfall to recover mining equipment that would let us dig a tunnel through this rockfall?”

“Yes,” Myles replied.

Craig considered this.

“Ok, I am in, let’s do this,” said Craig.

And suddenly everything was right with the universe again.

Because that is Craig. Present him with a tactical contradiction, a logistical absurdity, and a circular dependency with rocks in it, and the man does not complain. He does not seek governance. He does not ask whether the mission designers had been drinking. He simply hears the distant sound of chaos calling his name and begins warming up.

“Plan B,” said Myles, studying the map. “We head north till we get out of the snow, head west to the river, ride south to get the equipment, then blow a hole in the wall, and head home.”

So we did that.

Mostly.

Halfway there, the weather turned, and we hid in a cave. Luckily, we had prepared for this. Myles got out the campfire, the forge, and the beds, and we happily mined.

Dave set up the dehumidifier when Myles wasn’t looking.

The dehumidifier.

From the reject list.

It appeared quietly, like contraband at a school camp.

Myles did not approve it. Dave had packed it anyway. This was not rebellion, exactly. It was Dave. Dave hears “we don’t need that” and translates it as “pack it in case Myles is wrong but do not mention it until the evidence becomes hilarious.”

We eventually reached the location for the equipment.

Of course, it was halfway up a mountain.

Of course it was.

With Zaph taking the night off, we had to rely on Craig’s ramp-building, mountain-scaling skills to recover the laser drill.

This sentence should cause concern in any experienced reader.

Craig.

Ramp-building.

Mountain-scaling.

Laser drill.

Any one of those ingredients could ruin an evening. Combined, they should have produced a civil defence alert.

And wait for it…

Surprisingly, nothing went wrong.

At this point we had to wonder whether Zaph was operating Craig by remote control.

The drill was recovered.

The ramp did not collapse.

Craig did not fall into the geology.

No one was killed by a physics problem wearing a Craig mask.

This was deeply unnatural.

We returned to the rockfall and set up the laser drill in the marked location. The mission voiceover informed us that we had been on Icarus long enough that it was sure we would have come prepared with a power supply.

Dave glared at Myles.

“A power supply, that power supply you told me NOT to pack, you know the one in the cupboard.”

Myles looked sheepish.

“I guess I need to ride all the way back to Winchester, then.”

Dave did not let him suffer for long.

“As amusing as that would be, all I hear is blah blah blah when you are prepping,” responded Dave, pulling out the portable generator from Stripes’ pack. “Now if you could just wire this up, and put fuel in.”

Myles looked even more sheepish.

“I left the wiring tool back at Winchester, so I guess I have to go back for a tool and fuel.”

Dave reached into the depths of Stripes’ pack again, which by now appeared less like a mount inventory and more like a travelling hardware store with stripes.

“As amusing as that would be … sometimes I just have to do everything myself …” muttered Dave, pulling out the wiring tool and fuel.

The wiring tool.

The fuel.

Also from the rejected logistical shadow realm.

At this stage, Myles’s carefully curated mission list had suffered significant reputational damage. The approved items were present, yes, but the mission had been saved by the exact items Myles had specifically excluded. Somewhere in the distance, Zaph’s absence grew louder.

“Wait – I got this next bit,” said Myles, hoping to reclaim his reputation. “I packed hedgehogs for when the animals attack.”

This was true.

Myles had packed hedgehogs.

Not the small adorable kind, although given Icarus’s hostility, those would probably explode. These were defensive spikes, proper medieval anti-animal furniture designed to discourage anything charging through the wrong place.

Myles deployed three rows of hedgehogs between the laser drill and the pass behind us.

Craig moved the zebras to a safer spot and set up a fence, again playing Zaph’s role.

This was becoming uncomfortable. Craig was acting responsibly. Dave was tactically prepared. Myles had forgotten key equipment. Zaph was absent. The group roles had started spinning like a badly installed ceiling fan.

While we prepared, wolves and other animals wandered up to see what we were doing, so we killed and butchered them.

Craig set up the firepit so we could cook the meat.

Yes.

The firepit from the do not bring list.

At this point the reject list had become less of a list and more of a prophecy.

Finally, we were ready.

Dave flipped the switch.

The generator thumped into life.

The laser powered up.

The beam hit the rockfall and blasted a hole through the obstruction with all the subtlety of a corporate memo titled “Minor Terrain Adjustment.”

As expected, animals attacked.

“I am redeemed,” Myles cheered.

This was premature.

Because the animals did not attack from the rear.

They did not charge into the carefully deployed rows of hedgehogs.

They did not follow the lovely defensive script Myles had prepared for them.

Instead, we were attacked by three mammoths from the front, through the new hole.

The hedgehogs, meanwhile, stood proudly behind us, protecting us from the animals that never turned up.

So the jury is still out.

Is Myles redeemed?

The defence argues that Myles correctly predicted animal attack.

The prosecution notes that Myles defended the wrong direction.

The court reserves judgment, pending further mammoth-related evidence.

What followed was a great deal of gunfire.

A great deal.

Thank the powers that be for SMGs and assault rifles.

The submachine gun proved deeply therapeutic. The M16, despite its pissant 5.56 rounds, contributed to the group’s overall philosophy of “shoot the problem until it stops having opinions.”

Three mammoths later, eight wolves later, and after the required field work of skinning, cooking, and loading tusks onto the zebras, Myles declared the mission a success.

The voiceover cut in.

Now that we had cleared a path, it would be ever so grateful if we could explore the Arctic area for exotics.

We looked at the map.

The area to explore was clearly marked.

It was an area we had already ridden through.

We had ridden through the snow to get to a drill, to open a path to a region we already knew about, so that we could then explore an area we had already travelled through to reach the equipment that opened the path.

Yep.

Another successful mission brought to you by Myles and his motley crew.

It was getting late, so for once, sensibility won. We turned around, rode to a nearby lake, set up a small hut, deployed beds and a fire, and logged for the night.

This is what victory looks like in Icarus: exhausted men, traumatised zebras, mammoth tusks in the luggage, and a small wooden hut beside a frozen lake while the mission system quietly pretends everything made sense.



Tonight’s Campfire Song

Tonight’s campfire song was originally going to be “Bohemian Rhapsody,” sung by Myles.

The legal department, which consists mostly of common sense wearing a cheap wig, has advised that we instead perform an original CCF campfire lament that sounds like four idiots freezing beside a lake after shooting mammoths for shareholders.

Snow Biome Operetta for Absent Snipers

Zaph, you missed the mammoth bit,
Myles had brought a brand-new gun,
Dave brought half the shed for fun,
Craig became the sensible one,
Which frankly made us stare.

Zaph, the rocks were very blue,
Myles mistook them for a nest,
Dave then laughed and did his best,
To make the oxygen seem cursed,
And now oxite’s on the danger list.

Snow wolves came from stage left,
Scorpions waited stage right,
Zebras questioned every choice,
And no one packed light.

Dave had fuel, Dave had wire,
Dave had gadgets marked “do not require,”
Myles had hedgehogs facing backwards,
Craig had fences, meat, and fire.

Then the laser carved the mountain,
Then the mammoths thundered through,
Myles cried out “redemption!”
But the spikes had missed their cue.

Run away from the oxite,
Laugh until the blizzard clears,
Warm your hands on bad decisions,
Tell Zaph he should have been here.

Did We Learn or Achieve Anything This Week?

We learnt that no one listens to Myles when he is making a list for the mission.

This is not strictly new information, but the evidence base has expanded. A portable generator, biofuel, a wiring tool, a dehumidifier, and a firepit all appeared after being rejected. Every single one improved the situation. This does not look good for the list.

We learnt that if you cure Myles’s phobia, he just develops a new one.

Agrizoophobia was treated with an Uzi. Petraphobia was born from an oxite deposit. At this rate, the only safe long-term strategy is to issue Myles a firearm, a thermos of coffee, and a laminated card reading: “Not everything blue is trying to kill you, although on Icarus it is understandable that you checked.”

We learnt that we didn’t need electric lights.

This was the only thing Myles got right on the exclude list.

Naturally, no one will remember this next week.

Last week, we said to tune in this week to see if Dave’s new oil obsession had a purpose.

It is still not clear.

There is now a Polymerizer, an advanced battery pack, and plastic production running 24/7. Dave still refuses to say why. This can only mean one of three things: vehicles, weapons, infrastructure, or something worse than all three because Dave found it in the tech tree and it had numbers beside it.

Achievements Unlocked

Dave achieved: Save the Day
Pack the quintessential piece of equipment you were ordered to leave behind.

Myles achieved: SNAFU
Situation normal, all f#$ked up.

Craig achieved: Understudy
Be Zaph.

Tune In Next Week

Tune in next week to see if Craig reverts to normal when Zaph returns.

Tune in next week to see if Myles can redeem his op planning reputation.

Tune in next week to see if Dave can stop cracking oxite jokes at Myles’s expense.

He cannot.

But hope, like a zebra in a blizzard, refuses to die.