Saturday, March 28, 2026

Ice, Ice Baby


Ice, Ice Baby – Or: How Dave Weaponised Confidence and Lost a Horse

In other words – any plan that involves shooting a polar bear can only end badly – just ask Dave’s horse.

It’s kind of like when Dave says – I have a plan.
Which, in our group, is less a reassuring statement and more of a public safety announcement. Sirens should sound. Lights should flash. Zaph should appear out of nowhere just to say, “No.”


Winchester 2.0: Now With 300% More Poor Decisions

With Zaph away (clearly the universe removing adult supervision), Dave declared it the perfect opportunity to work on Lakehouse 2.0.

Or as I have officially, cartographically, and spiritually named it: Winchester.

Dave’s “small extension” plan included:

  • Extending the workshop

  • Expanding the kitchen

  • Re-roofing the second storey

Which would “make room” (Dave optimism scale: extreme) for:

  • Two relocated beds

  • A biofuel oxite dissolver

  • A glass working bench

  • A fabricator

  • A forge

  • An upgraded textile bench

In essence, we were converting a lakeside retreat into an industrial complex powered entirely by copper shortages and denial.

Meanwhile, I was handling farming plots, watering duties, and gathering sulphur—because someone has to keep the group alive while Dave builds increasingly unnecessary infrastructure.

Dave took a break from construction to visit the automated mines, swapping empty biofuel cans for full ones and returning like a triumphant pack mule with Aluminium, Charcoal, and Gold.

We then did a full mining circuit for exotics and ores to feed Dave’s building spree. Every floor tile required iron nails. Every wall demanded leather, wood, and stone. Every device consumed copper like it was a lifestyle choice.

We even installed an automated copper drill behind the trader. Not because we were prepared. Because we were desperate.


Craig: Now With Flamethrower (What Could Possibly Go Wrong)

Back at the house, Craig was performing his assigned chores:

  • Feeding animals

  • Gathering wood for tree sap & biofuel

  • Collecting fibre

  • Mining silicate

  • Producing charcoal

Given last week’s revelation that Craig cannot be trusted with open fires, Dave proposed the obvious solution:

Give him a flamethrower.

A significant amount of valuable resources was poured into crafting this instrument of selective environmental collapse.

And then—against all logic—Craig used it responsibly.

He cleared vegetation.
He burned trees carefully.
He showed restraint.

This was deeply unsettling for everyone involved.


Musical Interlude (Rewritten for Legal Reasons and Emotional Accuracy)

With Craig refusing to immolate the countryside on cue, the planned Fire performance was abandoned. Instead, Dave delivered something closer to a dying walrus attempting rhythm:

Yo VIP, let's kick it Ice, ice baby Ice, ice baby
Alright stop, collaborate and listen
Ice is back with my brand new invention – a water reservoir, and an Ice Box
Something grabs a hold of me tightly
Flow like a harpoon daily and nightly
Will it ever stop? Yo, I don't know
Turn off the lights, and I'll glow
Deadly, when I play a dope
Anything less than the best is a felony
Love it or leave it, you better gangway
You better hit bull's eye, the polar bear don't play
If there was a problem, yo, I'll solve it
Check out the hook while my DJ revolves it

This would later prove to be less a song and more a prophecy.


The Ice Plan (Which Was Definitely About Ice and Not Death)

Like all great tragedies, this began innocently:

“The kitchen could use an ice-box.”

We also needed a water reservoir. Dave built both, then handed out shovels and declared we would go collect ice.

Already, the signs were there.


The Expedition: South, Because Of Course

I checked the map. We had two choices: west or south.

Like a fool, I asked Dave.

Dave noted there was a world boss to the west and immediately chose south—because clearly, that direction had never gone wrong before.

We set out:

  • Dave and I on horses

  • Craig on his buffalo

Progress was slow, as Dave stopped at every berry, soy bean, watermelon, and carrot like a man determined to forage his way into irrelevance.

Eventually, we neared our destination. I spotted a brown bear and advised caution.

Dave snuck up, took careful aim, and released.

One shot. Clean kill.

Dave immediately began questioning Zaph’s competence with bears.

This was the turning point. Hubris had entered the chat.


The Polar Bear Incident (Also Known As: The Beginning of the End)

At the pass, we began digging snow.

I spotted a polar bear and advised immediate evacuation.

Dave responded by sneaking up on it.

At this exact moment, Craig and I were both peacefully digging ice on the edge of the ice field, blissfully unaware that Dave had decided to initiate Operation: Poor Life Choices without notifying command, support, or anyone possessing a survival instinct.

He drew his bow.

He fired.

The arrow struck the polar bear… in the arse.

The bear flinched. Looked around.

Dave fired again. And again. Each shot landing with increasing concern and decreasing effectiveness.

Then the bear locked onto Dave.

And charged.

I yelled at Dave, cursing him for shooting a bear without warning anyone.

Dave, at this point, was fully committed to the “run and regret later” strategy.

The bear struck.

Dave was flung through the air, painting the snow in a tasteful red motif.

He attempted to mount his horse.

The bear disagreed.

As Dave lay dying, his final vision was his horse bravely fighting the bear—and losing.


Score Update

Polar Bear: 2
Dave & Horse: 0


Recovery Operations (Featuring Craig, Somehow Competent)

I lured the polar bear away on horseback while Craig—yes, Craig—snuck back and resurrected Dave.

Dave recovered the saddle.

“I will never forget you – Iron Hauler 2.0,” he sobbed.

Which would have been more moving if he hadn’t immediately gone back to digging ice.


Because He Learned Nothing: The Black Bear Sequel

I returned to scouting and issued another warning:

“Be careful—black bear incoming.”

Dave stopped digging. Drew his bow. Crept forward.

You already know how this ends.

Black Bear: 1
Dave: 0

Craig resurrected Dave again.

At this point, we had transitioned from expedition to mobile revival service.


Return to Winchester (Now With Ice and Emotional Damage)

We returned home, loaded the water reservoir, and stocked the ice chest.

Dave, now traumatised by nature, retreated indoors to play with the glass working bench.

He produced reinforced glass windows and doors.

We ran out of materials with eleven gaping window holes in the second storey.

Winchester continues to evolve in ways no one understands.


The Beacon of False Hope

I asked Dave when my encrypted communication beacon would be ready.

I had everything except titanium plates and composites.

We used the fabricator to make the titanium plates.

All that remained was composites.

“How do we make those?” I asked.

Dave opened the Icarus knowledge base.

“Uh huh… got that… got that… we have some of that…”

Pause.

“Oh.”

I gave him the look.

“What do we need?”

“Electricity,” he said. “And an electric metal refiner. And some other thing. And a power substation.”

“So next week then?”


The Mysterious Burning Bridge

We ended the night with what can only be described as a literary masterpiece:

The Famous Five and the Mysterious Burning Bridge

I stepped outside, looked over the lake, and noticed something deeply wrong.

“Who built the busted wooden bridge out over the lake?”

Craig denied everything.

Dave pointed out that he uses stone now, citing the lake walkway as evidence of personal growth.

We went to sleep.

Moments later, Craig woke us:

“Who set my bridge on fire?!”

We looked.

The bridge was not on fire.

Craig insisted it was.

We both streamed.

  • Craig’s stream: bridge on fire

  • My stream: perfectly fine

At this point, the possibilities were:

  1. Icarus itself rejecting Craig’s construction

  2. Dave secretly acquiring the flamethrower

  3. Reality giving up

Some mysteries are not meant to be solved.


Lessons Learned (Debatable)

We learnt:

  • Craig can be trusted with fire

  • Craig cannot be trusted with construction

  • A small success goes to Dave’s head, driving logic out

  • The biofuel composter would work better if Craig stopped stealing the inputs


Achievements

  • Dave: Thirsty Work, Idiot (killed by a Polar Bear)

  • Myles: Herding Cats

  • Craig: For Me (burn down a forest using a flamethrower)

  • Zaph: Night Off


Next Week

We attempt to install a waterwheel on a lake with no flowing water to generate electricity to power something to make composites so I can unlock harder missions.

Because clearly, what this group needs…
is more complexity.


Footnote: The Bit Dave “Forgot” (Conveniently)

* It should be noted for the official record—since accuracy matters, and Dave’s memory is apparently selective at best—that Dave also forgot to mention the bit where he abandoned me in a mine, left to process the iron ore in the forge—alone—as the night and a storm closed in.

Only to have a Black bear start eating my horse, which required me to single-handedly kill it, because clearly that was now my problem.

Immediately following this, a large spider decided to join the evening’s festivities, which I also killed—again, alone—because teamwork had apparently been cancelled for the night.

At this point, having reached my quota for “unexpected wildlife encounters while unsupervised,” I packed up the ingots and the forge, and headed out into the storm to try and find my way home before dying of exposure.

It was a rough night.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Who Let the Wolves Out

Who Let the Wolves Out

A completely avoidable series of events, featuring architecture, agriculture, arson, and wolves. Mostly wolves.


It really does say something about a game when it becomes so offensively enjoyable that real life begins to pile up in quiet protest. Laundry mounts insurgencies. Dishes form alliances. Responsibilities glare at you from across the room like disappointed parents. And so, naturally, we scheduled a makeup session to deal with the far more pressing issue of in-game housework. Everyone was there.

Even Craig.

This, historically, has never been a reassuring statement.


A Brief History of Our Housing Market Failures

Before we begin, a moment of reflection.

Somewhere in Enshrouded, there exists a Spiderhouse. Within it are starving animals. Forgotten. Abandoned. Possibly writing memoirs about us.

On Dune, our once-epic mansion was sandblasted into myth by dust storms.

And on some long-forgotten realm, we were forcibly evicted by a Gold Dragon.

(Thanks, Craig.)

With this impeccable track record in mind, we decided—confidently, boldly—that it was time to move house again.


The Great Relocation Initiative™

Myles, dusting off his long-neglected leadership credentials (still slightly singed from prior misuse), declared that the rustic cottage was being criminally underutilised. It needed purpose. It needed vision.

It needed to be moved down to the lake.

Closer to the shop.

A sentence which, at the time, seemed reasonable.

Dave, never one to resist a full teardown, immediately declared the Half Stone–Half Wood Lakehouse obsolete—a relic of a less enlightened age (roughly last week). He proceeded to ransack it with the enthusiasm of a man who had just discovered all his possessions were technically lootable.

Workbenches? Gone.
Supplies? Gone.
Structural dignity? Optional.

Everything was loaded onto the cart, hauled to the rustic house… which was then also dismantled. Because consistency matters.


Urban Planning, But With Wolves

We took a leisurely circuit around the lake to find the perfect building site. This involved walking, pointing, second-guessing, and Craig wandering off in straight lines for reasons known only to Craig.

Eventually, a location was chosen.

A double-storey house was constructed.
A fenced enclosure for mounts was added.
A series of increasingly aggressive wolves objected to this development.

The wolves attempted to eat the mounts.
We objected to this objection.

Violence ensued.

Meanwhile, Dave, deep in his architectural phase, installed a sloped roof. This was a bold design choice, primarily because we ran out of materials halfway through.

The result: a roof that could best be described as philosophically complete.


Fire Safety Planning (Sort Of)

On the positive side, we established a robust emergency protocol:

If Myles burns down the forest,
we can all hide in the lake.

This will become relevant later.


🎵 This Week’s Musical Interlude 🎵

As foretold, Craig took on the role of travelling bard, delivering a rendition of On the Road Again that can only be described as autobiographical negligence:

🎵
On the road again
Just can't wait to get on the road again
The life I love is makin' trouble for my friends
And I can't wait to get on the road again

On the road again,
Don’t know where I’m going but I’m sprinting in,
There’s wolves ahead but I’ll just lean right in,
Can’t wait to pull aggro once again…

On the road again,
Zaph is yelling “stop” but I ignore my friend,
Myles drawing maps I’ll never comprehend,
Dave’s still picking flowers in the end…

On the road again,
Something big is chasing—guess I’ll kite it then,
Or maybe bring it back to base and see what happens when,
We all die horribly again…
🎵

A haunting ballad. A warning, really.


Pre-Zaph Productivity (A Rare Phenomenon)

In an unprecedented display of efficiency, Dave, Myles, and Craig logged in two hours early to finish the house so it would be pristine when Zaph arrived.

Dave, fuelled by purpose and possibly caffeine, established mining drills on nearby coal, gold, and aluminium deposits.

He then improved the house:

  • Added a vestibule

  • Removed doors (because doors are apparently a suggestion)

  • Roofed Craig’s firepits to prevent rain-related existential crises

Meanwhile, Myles requested agricultural expansion. Dave responded by:

  • Building a shovel

  • Moving dirt

  • Installing garden plots

  • Planting coffee, cocoa, carrots, sugar cane, and tea

Civilisation had arrived.


Craig vs Forestry: Round 47

Craig, unsupervised, chopped down another forest.

He stacked the lumber directly in everyone’s way.

Then complained—complained—when we used it to build:

  • Farm plots

  • Sap

  • Biofuel

  • Furniture

  • A door

(One door. Let’s not get carried away.)


Ore, Ingots, and Mild Disappointment

Myles and Craig embarked on a mining expedition, hauling back vast quantities of ore.

Progress was made. Ingots were forged.

And yet, despite all advances in technology and civilisation, Craig still could not reliably place ore in the correct furnace.

Some mysteries endure.


The Shop (A Monument to Expectations)

Myles and Zaph had spent considerable time describing the shop to Dave.

It had:

  • Expansive farming

  • Drip watering systems

  • A greenhouse

They spoke of it with the reverence normally reserved for ancient wonders.

Dave arrived. Looked at it.

“I expected it to be bigger,” he muttered.

And thus, reality reasserted itself.


Project: Exterminates – Lupus

Myles, increasingly irritated by nearby world bosses refusing to pay rent, initiated a project.

He armed himself with:

  • Spiked walls

  • Hedgehogs

  • Determination

The plan: remove wolves from the tenancy agreement.

Dave returned from the old house with remaining workbenches and completed the roof—ensuring, crucially, that none of the sections aligned in the same direction.

Craig built another inconvenient wood pile.

Balance was restored.


The Wolf Incident (Which Was Definitely a Bear)

After dinner, we gathered for the grand hunt.

Zaph logged in. Assessed the situation. Asked, “what are we hunting?”

“A bear,” declared Dave confidently, pointing at his map.

Zaph, using actual vision, replied:
“No bear. Lots of wolf tracks. Are you sure it’s not a wolf?”

“Definitely a big bad bear… just look at the world boss symbol.”

Craig triggered the fight.

Because of course he did.


“Wolves!! Why does it have to be wolves,” Dave moaned, missing every shot as the pack charged.

The wolves smashed into the fortifications, tearing down walls before the boss had even arrived.

Then it appeared.

A colossal black wolf. Red eyes. Flaming paws. A creature seemingly forged from spite and poor decision-making.

A hellhound.

And somehow…

No one died.

This alone should be recorded as a statistical anomaly.

After much chaos:

  • Zaph and the team shredded its defenses

  • Craig illuminated the battlefield with green flare arrows

  • Myles’ hedgehogs delivered the final, humiliating blow

The beast fell.

Project Exterminates – Lupus: Success.


The Silence of Craig

We skinned the wolves and returned home.

Myles stayed behind to dismantle fortifications.

Craig grew quiet.

This is never good.


The Fire

As Myles rode away, he glanced back at the lakehouse, glowing in the morning light.

A proud moment.

Then a pause.

The sun… was in the wrong direction.

The glow intensified.

The forest was on fire.

Myles turned and rode back at full speed, only to find Craig calmly cooking meat on a campfire placed directly on flammable ferns.

The surrounding forest had already transitioned into charcoal.

No dragon required. The culprit was obvious.

Eventually, the fire burned itself out.

Which, frankly, was the best-case scenario.


Predator: Not Arnold Schwarzenegger

We regrouped for a new mission.

“Predator something.”

“It's not the predator from the movie is it?” Dave asked. “Because I forgot to pack Arnold Schwarzenegger and a minigun.”

“I am sure its just bored house cat,” Myles replied. “Easy peasy.”

This optimism would not age well.


Tracking… Or Not

Myles built fortifications.

Zaph instantly killed the pack leader.

The mission updated: find tracks.

We searched for 30 minutes. Nothing.

Eventually, Zaph discovered the tracks.

They were under a wall.

A wall built by Myles.

There was a moment.

We moved on.


Preparations and Delay

We followed tracks, killed wolves, and eventually located the creature’s future appearance point.

It would emerge at dusk.

It was currently breakfast.

So naturally, we:

  • Built a barn

  • Stopped Craig from starting another forest fire

  • Constructed more hedgehogs

Because you can never have enough hedgehogs.

Dusk remained stubbornly distant.

So we called it.


Lessons Learned (Debatable)

Dave attempted to enjoy Borderlands 4, found the loot system offensive, and updated his negative review accordingly.

Icarus, meanwhile, insisted we had achieved things.

Which seems optimistic.


Achievements (Some More Questionable Than Others)

  • Dave: Thirsty (Build a 50 litre water tank)

  • Myles: Rock ‘n’ Roll (mine all the types of Ore)

  • Craig:

    • Highly Skilled

    • Pyromaniac (unofficial but undeniable)

    • What’s that green glow?

  • Zaph: One Shot Kill


Final Assessment

Craig cannot be trusted with:

  • Fire

  • Shopping

  • Gold Dragons

  • Maps

  • Scouting

  • Cooking

  • Building

He can be trusted with:

  • Mining stone

  • Chopping trees

  • Melting snow

And even then, he somehow burns the water.


Tune in next week when:

  • Dave learns farming from a trader

  • Zaph trains his third horse

  • Myles feeds animals fish chunks

  • Craig continues his lifelong quest to ensure no forest survives

And, critically, to keep Dave too distracted to mention the Gold Dragon incident ever again.