Saturday, June 13, 2026

Icarus: Project Cold Beer, Desert Cougars, and the Great Coffee Economy

 


This week, the Crypt Creeps got serious.

Not “we have a plan” serious. Not “we understand the tech tree” serious. Certainly not “Craig has read the instructions” serious, because there are limits to the plausible and this blog remains, broadly speaking, a work of non-fiction.

No, this week we got serious about making money and exploring the desert, which in Icarus is less a financial strategy and more a polite way of saying: “Let’s ride several zebras into a beige death trap and see whether the local wildlife has evolved taxation.”

It began, naturally, with alcohol.

Project Cold Beer

Myles and Dave got on an hour early because “Its never too early for a cold one” declared Dave, a man who treats industrial progress as something that should ideally lead to either weaponry, refrigeration, or something drinkable by the end of the evening.

Dave immediately got busy turning glass and iron into bottles, and wheat, yeast and bottles into Beer, which was then stored in the refrigerator. There are many great milestones in human civilisation. Fire. The wheel. Written language. Refrigerated beer on an alien death planet while a zebra waits outside carrying several tonnes of ore and unresolved trauma.

Myles, clinging to the last shreds of civilised behaviour, asked what we had to drink that wasn’t alcoholic.

So Dave invented Milk.

This was a splendid achievement, slightly undermined by the fact that we didn’t have cows, pasteurisation, refrigeration supply chains, or indeed any of the things traditionally involved in milk that doesn’t cause a medieval public health incident. We therefore had to settle for disgusting soy milk, because in space, no one can hear you fart.

And because the farm had now entered the sticky entrepreneurial phase of development, Dave also bottled some of our enormous honey surplus and turned berries into jam. Somehow, in the minds of the Icarus developers, gooey food is a shared experience to be enjoyed and rewarded with more shared experience. This means Craig can mooch off everyone else’s hard work merely by standing near the agricultural-industrial complex and existing in a vaguely cooperative direction.

To be fair, we need all the sharing we can get, because everyone else is sixteen levels behind Dave.

Dave has not so much advanced through the game as filed for technological custody of it.

Cleaning House

While Dave pursued the sacred arts of yeast, glassware, and suspicious dairy substitutes, Myles decided to spring clean some cupboards.

This was not a small task.

The Winchester storage system is best described as “archaeological.” Somewhere under the wood, rope, sulphur, spoiled meat, spare armour, unidentified fluids, mystery seeds, six kinds of ore, and the spiritual residue of Craig’s previous projects, there are probably early human cave paintings and a tax receipt from the Bronze Age.

All the vestiges were packed in bags and given to Zaph for delivery while everyone prepared for the desert exploration. Zaph, being Zaph, accepted this logistical burden with the quiet air of a man already calculating the shortest route, the safest path, and the number of headshots required if bureaucracy became hostile.

Myles went through the adventuring cupboard and reorganised the bags, because Dave just stuffs things in whatever is handy. This is Dave’s preferred system. It has many advantages, provided you are Dave, have Dave’s brain, and can perceive inventory space in the fourth dimension.

“Did you know we have 5 MXC furnaces?” Myles asked Dave.

“Hey, who's counting?” Dave replied.

Myles was counting. Obviously Myles was counting. Someone has to count, because otherwise Dave’s idea of “packed for a light expedition” includes five portable furnaces, three oxite dissolvers, enough food to feed a scout jamboree, half a geology department, and Craig, who is technically not equipment but often ends up being carried by the group’s patience.

Myles sorted the gear and packed it onto Patch, who accepted this burden with the quiet fatalism of an animal that has seen what we call “planning.”

Farming 102: Almost a Greenhouse

Craig joined us, which meant it was time to give him a job before he invented one.

We sent him to water and harvest the crops.

This was, on paper, safe. It involved plants, water, and repeatedly pressing buttons in the vicinity of agriculture. Craig complained about the lack of reward for his manual effort, presumably because the crops did not explode, scream, or launch him from a cliff.

Zaph watered the crops and noted that 10,000 XP for five minutes of work was a pretty good return.

Dave heard this and immediately thought: I bet I could double that by just adding another 20 plots.

This is Dave’s superpower. Present him with a working system and he will immediately scale it until it becomes either a business, a factory, or a fire risk.

So Dave dug some dirt, raided the sulphur and wood cupboards, and added more plots. This time he planted soy beans, because Project Milk had apparently become a strategic priority, and more coffee, because we were beginning to discover that caffeine might be the true currency of the stars.

Then a half fence was added, with a couple of doors to keep animals out. This was sensible. Practical. Almost professional.

At which point Dave noticed half the crops were getting no benefit from the four glass panels previously installed.

There was a pause. The kind of pause that happens just before Dave says something that begins as a minor improvement and ends with all our silica being converted into architecture.

Back to the drawing board.

After converting all our silica to glass, and making more glass panels and walls, we now have a glass wall going all the way around the glass house.

Is it a greenhouse? Almost.

Is it a statement of intent? Absolutely.

Is it also a monument to Dave noticing one inefficiency and immediately turning the base into a Victorian botanical annex with a sulphur dependency? Yes.

Craig’s Unauthorised Projects

Craig, bored with farming, wandered off to do what he does best.

This is, to be clear, a low bar.

Craig’s role in the group is difficult to define in conventional terms. He is not exactly a scout, because scouts usually report information back. He is not exactly a builder, because builders usually produce structures with an identifiable purpose. He is not exactly a combat specialist, because combat specialists generally try not to introduce monsters to the group by accident.

Craig is more of a mobile incident generator.

His latest masterpiece was his mountain ascension walkway, a project whose guiding design principle appears to be: “What if a tourist boardwalk was designed by Wile E. Coyote after a small electrical fire?”

The first we knew of Craig being AWOL was hearing him complain that he was on fire, having been struck by lightning. This was followed shortly by a scream as he plunged to his death.

There are many ways to interpret this sequence of events. In Greek myth, Icarus flew too close to the sun. In Icarus the game, Craig climbed too close to whatever part of the weather system handles divine slapstick.

Myles set out to assist him, with a detour to refuel a few mining drills, because even emergency rescue in Winchester comes with errands.

Meanwhile, Zaph discovered Craig had built a tall ladder going nowhere on the roof of the house.

This is the sort of sentence that should not require further explanation, and yet somehow explains Craig perfectly.

Zaph climbed the ladder and got stuck at the top. Unfortunately, the ladder was also stopping one of the wind turbines from working, meaning Craig’s pointless vertical infrastructure had successfully interfered with renewable energy.

The ladder had to be dismantled.

“So sad,” mused Dave.

It was not clear whether Dave was mourning the ladder, the turbine efficiency, or the brief but shining moment in which Craig had built something that affected the base without technically destroying it.

A Desert Mining Trip

Dave had heard rumours that there was a cave to mine behind a waterfall in the desert.

What he didn’t know was that this was a rumour started by cougars to attract snacks.

After an even more hurried-than-usual preparation, we set off on a desert mining expedition. “Hurried-than-usual” is an important distinction, because our usual preparation already resembles four raccoons loading a caravan during an earthquake.

This time, under Dave's eagle eye, Craig made work lamps. This was either a sign of growing trust or Dave temporarily confusing Craig with someone who follows manufacturing instructions.

To stop Craig from getting bored, Dave gave him a project to construct a foundry.

This was where the evening’s slow-burning comedy charge was laid. None of us knew it yet. Craig least of all.

We arrived safely at the desert, took the easy path down that avoided cave worms, and waved at the fisherman as we rode past. This is the kind of surreal Icarus detail that has become normal. Alien planet. Hostile ecosystem. Rampant predators. We ride past a fisherman as if this is a weekend cycle path near a municipal lake.

Dave noted two new future automated mining locations for iron and titanium, because even while travelling through danger, Dave sees the world not as a landscape but as a collection of unexploited production nodes.

We travelled along the river, avoiding animals. Eventually we got to the waterfall.

“I don’t know,” said Myles, staring at the terrain with the wary suspicion of a man who has been led into nonsense before. “It doesn’t look like this has a cave.”

Dave checked the map.

Then Dave checked his secret rumour map.

Then Dave hurriedly moved his marker to a different spot in the desert and declared we had taken the wrong turn.

This was accepted with the weary grace of men who have followed Dave before and understand that “the wrong turn” is often not a geographical event but a narrative obligation.

Finally, we got to the waterfall, and there was coal, which is usually a good sign that a cave is nearby.

There were also jackals, scorpions, and cougars.

This is also usually a good sign that the cave is nearby, because Icarus likes to protect natural resources with the same energy a dragon reserves for gold.

Zaph then showed us how to swim up a waterfall, like salmon.

Even zebras can swim up waterfalls.

This was not something anyone expected to learn, and yet there we were, watching alien-frontier livestock perform aquatic miracles. Somewhere, evolution quietly put its papers down and walked into the sea.

We spent way too long playing in the waterfalls before Zaph requested clearer instructions. This was very Zaph: efficient, precise, and increasingly aware that the tactical value of pretending to be fish had expired.

Dave checked the rumour again.

Go behind the waterfall, turn right on the ledge, dig through the wall into the cave.

Zaph was wet and unimpressed, but he found the cave anyway.

Dave started mining while Myles set up a campfire and five MXC forges so Zaph could dry out. This is a perfectly normal sentence in our group. Someone swims up a waterfall, someone else unpacks a portable industrial smelting line, and the whole thing is treated as responsible expedition management.

Craig placed the work lamps, which, to everyone’s surprise, actually worked and provided real light.

There was a moment of silence. Not because the light was beautiful, though it was useful. Not because the cave had been conquered, though it had been located. But because Craig had installed something correctly, and nobody was emotionally prepared.

“Where do you want the foundry?” Craig asked.

Dave smacked himself in the head several times with the flat of his pick.

“It doesn’t fit in the cave, Dave,” Craig added.

Dave considered smacking Craig with his pick.

Instead, with the restraint of a saint and the blood pressure of a shaken soft drink, he replied calmly that we were installing that in his lake workshop back at Winchester.

Craig looked puzzled.

“Why did you tell me to bring it then?”

Dave sighed.

Stripes sighed.

Patch sighed.

Somewhere in the desert, a cougar sighed.

The foundry had not been brought because it was needed in the cave. It had been brought because Craig had been given a task to keep him busy, and Craig, being Craig, had completed that task without passing through the thin checkpoint marked “why.”

We mined.

Myles loaded the finished ingots on Patch.

We started the journey home.

The Hole in the Ground

On the way back, Dave noted another mine.

Zaph scouted ahead and did not find a mine. He found a hole in the ground.

This is not quite the same thing, though in Icarus the distinction is often academic until someone falls into it.

Zaph, being responsible, fenced it off to avoid accidents and installed a couple of ladders to help people descend. Then he fell off and did the fast trip to the bottom.

This was excellent field testing.

Zaph explored and found an easier entrance, and an underwater cave in the cave. Because one cave was apparently insufficient, and the game had decided to include a cave subcommittee.

We installed lights, furnaces and strip-mined the place.

By this stage the expedition had become less “desert exploration” and more “aggressive geological eviction.”

On the way back to Winchester we collected more platinum from our automated mines. At home, we put it in the concrete furnace to bake for three hours.

Industrial civilisation had resumed.

The zebras were probably grateful.

Dave’s Secret Workshop Project

After all the manufacturing of parts and complex machinery, Myles and Craig had levelled twice.

This is always a sign that Dave has been allowed to operate near a tech tree unsupervised.

Also, the state of the nation was as follows:

  • We are out of Sulphur.

  • We are out of Silica.

  • We are almost out of copper.

  • Craig made and installed a foundry.

  • Myles made and installed a manufacturer, 2 organic extractors, and a natural oil refinery.

  • Dave made a 2-storey workshop out on the lake, so any industrial accidents would assist in the fish removal project.

This last point deserves recognition.

Dave had built a two-storey workshop out on the lake. For a while, the platform had simply existed as one of Dave’s many mysterious structures, like Stonehenge if Stonehenge had been assembled from composite beams and unresolved intent.

Now its purpose was clear.

It was an industrial workshop.

On the lake.

Because if a machine explodes, catches fire, leaks oil, or creates some new form of workplace hazard not yet named by OSHA, at least it might help remove fish from the area.

This is the kind of environmental management that makes sense only after midnight.

How Are the Crops Growing?

Craig is doing a great job watering and harvesting.

This sentence is true, and therefore should be treated with the same reverence as a comet, an eclipse, or Dave not picking up every alchemical reagent in a five-kilometre radius.

The only issue is that we still need to get Craig to put the crops in the pouches in the secret stash.

This is apparently the next great hurdle in agricultural logistics. Craig can water the plants. Craig can harvest the plants. Craig can perform the labour. But placing the outputs into the correct storage pouches remains, as yet, beyond the reach of modern science.

Myles took the coffee crop to the trader to sell.

360 Ren.

In far less time than it takes to butcher wildlife, skin it, dry the meat, and ship it to orbit.

To put that in perspective, six hours spent hunting over two sessions to produce dried meat for some corporate schmucks in orbit earns 350 Ren.

Craig, managing the crops for one session, generates 360 Ren worth of coffee.

This was a revelation.

Coffee was not merely a crop. Coffee was not merely a beverage. Coffee was a quiet rebuke to the entire dried-meat economy.

For weeks we had been running around like frontier butchers, turning innocent wildlife into space jerky for orbital executives with protein quotas and suspicious procurement policies. Meanwhile, the real money was sitting in the soil, gently caffeinating itself into financial independence.

Coffee rules.

Visages drool.

The Titanium Mining Project

Dave did the trip out to the titanium mine and installed an electric drill, with a waterwheel in the nearby creek to power it.

This is Dave’s happy place: water, power, ore, automation, and no one asking whether the base actually needed another production chain.

He installed a second waterwheel and an electric drill on the iron site. After unclogging the third waterwheel, he collected its drill’s platinum and headed home.

The industrial network grows.

The map slowly fills with machines.

Somewhere in the wilderness, a cougar wonders why the river now has infrastructure.

There Is Money in Coffee

By the end of the evening, the economy had spoken.

  • Visages – 165 Ren

  • Coffee – 565 Ren

Of course, Myles had to ask at half past midnight what the point of the money was.

This is a dangerous thing to ask Dave after half past midnight, because Dave does not hear “what is the point of the money?” as a philosophical question. He hears it as a cry for instruction.

So Myles and Craig got the “It's for spending” lecture from Dave, who opened the catalogue and showed them the fancy backpacks, armour and crossbow bolts that could be made in space and shipped down.

There is something deeply Icarus about this. We grow coffee in a half-greenhouse, sell it to a trader, convert the profits into orbital manufacturing credit, and use that to buy better equipment so we can more efficiently raid caves, build workshops, and grow more coffee.

Capitalism has reached the zebra stage.

Tonight’s Campfire Song: Beer for My Zebra, Sung by Dave

At some point, as all truly doomed expeditions must, the evening acquired a campfire song.

Dave, having invented cold beer, soy milk, glass agriculture, lake industry, and coffee capitalism, turned his attention to music.

The result was a frontier justice ballad aimed squarely at the real villains of Icarus: cougars.

Grandad, according to Dave, had very firm opinions about wildlife management.
They mostly involved rope, trees, stern moral lessons, and absolutely no due process for cougars.

  So we saddled up, drew a line in the sand,
  then immediately lost the line because Craig had built a ladder through it.
  When the smoke cleared and the desert stopped trying to eat us,
  we all agreed to meet back at Winchester,
  raise a glass to poor decisions,
  and sing the only chorus that mattered:

  Soy milk for the humans, beer for the zebras.
  Soy milk for the humans, beer for the zebras.

Not because the zebras asked for beer. Not because this is recommended animal husbandry. But because those zebras had carried ore, endured waterfalls, tolerated Craig, and deserved something better than being parked outside while we argued about where the foundry was supposed to go.

The campfire crackled.

The desert listened.

Somewhere, a cougar reconsidered its life choices.

Did We Learn or Achieve Anything This Week?

Against all precedent, yes.

We learnt that more crops mean more money, and coffee rules while visages drool.

We learnt what Dave built the platform in the lake for: a workshop.

We learnt that there are things more demanding of biomass than the biofuel composter.

We learnt what hamsters feel like on the endless biofuel wheel of life.

We learnt that Craig can be trusted to water crops, install lamps, and make a foundry, provided the definition of “trusted” includes “may bring the foundry to the wrong place and ask why after the fact.”

We learnt that Zaph can swim up waterfalls, and so can zebras, which raises questions about physics, biology, and whether the Icarus rivers are secretly installed by Bethesda.

We learnt that Dave’s rumours may be accurate, eventually, after he moves the marker.

We learnt that “behind the waterfall” is still the most suspicious phrase in gaming.

And we learnt that if a group of middle-aged IT nerds are placed on a hostile alien planet with farming tools, mining drills, and access to a trade catalogue, they will inevitably reinvent coffee futures, industrial sprawl, and workplace safety violations in that order.

Last Week’s Promises, This Week’s Reckoning

Last week, we said to tune in this week to see if Dave invents cold beer.

Done.

Dave invented cold beer so thoroughly that it became a project, a lifestyle, and the emotional foundation of the evening.

We said to tune in to see what was hiding in the waterfall in the desert.

An empty cave, after we strip-mined it.

Strictly speaking, there were also jackals, scorpions, cougars, coal, water-based salmon impressions, and a foundry misunderstanding of historic proportions, but the final result was indeed an empty cave.

We said to tune in to see if we could sell all the vestiges we collected for more than coffee makes.

Nope.

Coffee wins every time.

The dead may leave behind mysterious relics. The fields leave behind profit.

Achievements Unlocked

Dave achieved: Boss Man — make everyone else do the grunt work.

Myles achieved: Mass Production — unlock the manufacturer.

Myles also achieved: The Better Option — generate refined oil from a natural oil refiner.

Craig achieved: That First Step Is a Doozy — fall from the top of a mountain.

Zaph achieved: Salmon — swim to the top of a waterfall.

Patch achieved: Silent Endurance — carry the consequences of everyone else’s decisions.

Stripes achieved: Moral Fatigue — sigh in the desert at exactly the correct moment.

The cougars achieved: Marketing Excellence — spread a rumour about a cave behind a waterfall and wait for food to arrive.

Tune In Next Week

Tune in next week to see if Dave’s new oil obsession has no purpose.

At time of writing, all signs point to “it will absolutely have a purpose,” followed by “that purpose will require every resource we no longer have,” followed by “Myles will ask one reasonable question and Dave will open another catalogue.”

The greenhouse will probably expand.

The lake workshop will probably gain more machines.

The coffee economy will probably become official policy.

Craig will probably continue building mountain infrastructure that violates both gravity and common sense.

Zaph will probably find the efficient route through whatever nonsense the rest of us are calling a plan.

And Myles will, as ever, map the chaos, pack the bags, clean the cupboards, sell the coffee, and wonder whether the zebras really do prefer beer.

Because on Icarus, survival is optional.

But cold beer and coffee?

Those are civilisation.






Saturday, June 06, 2026

Icarus: The Cold Beer Industrial Complex

This week’s expedition on Icarus was, in the strictest possible sense, a continuation of last week’s unfinished business.

In the less strict but more accurate sense, it was a study in how four middle-aged IT nerds can turn a survival crafting game into a multinational logistics concern, an illegal fish-rendering facility, a wildlife provocation experiment, and a Las Vegas zoning violation.

There was mining. There was farming. There was radar. There were elephants. There was a refrigerator. There was Craig being told not to do something and then producing a legalistic interpretation so aggressive that somewhere, a barrister woke up sweating.

And, most importantly, there was the beginning of Dave’s most ambitious project yet.

Not shelter. Not weapons. Not power generation. Not a reliable food chain.

Cold beer.

The Cave of Wonders

The evening began with the sort of hurried, minimalist preparation that would have appalled Scott of the Antarctic, NASA, and anyone who has ever successfully packed for a weekend away.

The mission was simple: head into the desert, find the great cave of wonders, strip-mine it with the quiet dignity of an interstellar resource extraction corporation, and return home richer, heavier, and only mildly traumatised.

Beds were packed. A concrete furnace was packed. Four MXC furnaces were packed. A campfire was packed. Water and food were loaded. Various items of questionable necessity were presumably thrown in as well because this is CCF, and no one has ever left base without at least one object whose only purpose is to become a problem later.

The group arrived safely at the desert and, in a rare moment of wisdom, took the easy path down that avoided the cave worms. This was not cowardice. This was operational maturity. There is a fine line between bravery and willingly walking into a tunnel full of acid-spitting subterranean horrors because someone wants “just a quick look.”

The fisherman was waved at as the expedition rode past. A dignified moment. Civilised. Almost serene.

Naturally, Icarus interpreted serenity as a bug and immediately patched it out.

The first jackal appeared.

Then another.

Then a scorpion.

Then a cougar.

It was as if all the animals that hid from the group last week had received a new memo from central management: meals on zebra had arrived.

They swarmed. The group ran. Sand flew. Zebra hooves thundered. The desert transformed from scenic travel segment into a sponsored documentary entitled Why Nature Is Not Your Friend.

A cougar cut off Dave’s escape.

Ordinarily, this would have been worrying. But Dave was riding Sir Stripes, the toughest zebra hellion the desert had ever seen. There was surely no cougar on Icarus that could withstand Stripes’ pounding hooves. Sir Stripes was not merely transport. Sir Stripes was attitude with stripes. A four-legged argument against predation.

Unfortunately, the cougar had not received that particular version of the briefing.

It ignored Stripes entirely.

Rather than taking on the magnificent zebra war machine beneath him, the cougar swiped its claws at the tasty morsel perched on Stripes’ back. Stripes survived uninjured, which was splendid news for Stripes, and Dave left a trail of blood across the sand as everyone raced on.

The group took the long way to throw off the scent and allow Dave time to bandage and heal. This is what passes for battlefield medicine in CCF: ride faster, bleed attractively, and hope the local predators are distracted by Craig doing something louder somewhere else.

At last, the cave came into view.

The cave of wonders.

The sacred mineral womb.

The place where dreams are forged, ingots are born, and Dave asks why nobody brought the correct lighting.

Myles installed the dehumidifier. Dave set out the furnaces. Craig installed light bulbs. Myles set out the generator, added fuel, and flipped the switch.

“Let there be light,” he proudly declared.

And there was light.

Technically.

There were ten small glowing patches, which were useful as beacons, in the same way a birthday candle is useful as a lighthouse if one is being very generous and possibly concussed. They did not, however, work for mining.

This caused a moment of reflection.

Dave clearly had not been clear when he specified that the group needed lights for mining. Dave had apparently been thinking of free-standing 1000-watt bulbs — the sort of industrial lighting that makes a worksite visible from low orbit. Craig, meanwhile, had delivered something closer to 100-watt frosted light bulbs. Pleasant ambience. Gentle glow. Very suitable for a romantic dinner in a cave where everyone is slowly developing silicosis.

Dave turned on his biofuel lamp and got to work.

While Dave and Craig mined, Myles loaded the finished ingots onto Patch, who had been demoted from stripey horse substitute to police-themed pack mule. Patch bore this demotion with the stoic dignity of an animal that had no idea promotion was ever on the table.

The Fish Extermination Project

Back at base, the Fish Extermination Project continued.

It is going well.

Possibly too well.

Every ten minutes, fish are removed from the traps, loaded into the composter, turned into rotted animal bits, and then shoved into the ravaging biofuel composter to refill cans and lamps.

This is, objectively, horrific.

It is also efficient.

The lake is showing no signs of running out of fish, which is fortunate, because the group cannot catch enough fish to keep up with the biofuel demand. This says less about the fish population and more about the terrifying appetite of Dave’s expanding industrial machine.

The circle of life on Icarus now goes something like this:

Fish enter trap.

Fish become shame.

Shame becomes rot.

Rot becomes fuel.

Fuel becomes light.

Light becomes mining.

Mining becomes electronics.

Electronics become refrigerator.

Refrigerator becomes cold beer.

And somewhere in the middle of all this, Myles becomes responsible for maintaining the grid, because apparently this is what happens when one becomes the reluctant adult in the room.

Myles Levels Up

While Zaph was out hunting, Dave decided it was time to explain the ins and outs of XP generation to Myles.

This was delivered not as a casual tutorial, but as a sermon. Dave, standing before the sacred benches of industry, had become less a player and more a prophet of manufacturing throughput.

“Take a lot of copper and gold ingots and put them in the fabricator, and turn them into wire,” Dave instructed.

“Why?” asked Myles.

“That’s a good question,” said Dave. “We are going to make electronics.”

So far, this was almost reasonable. Copper and gold into wire. Wire into electronics. An elegant little chain of industrial logic. Myles, suspicious but not yet alarmed, continued.

“Now take oxite and wood, place them in the mortar and pestle, and turn them into Organic Resin.”

“Why?” asked Myles.

“Another good question, that’s one of the ingredients for electronics.”

Again, this was acceptable, assuming one does not think too hard about why alien planet electronics require mashed-up oxite and wood. But crafting systems are a kind of religion. Questions may be asked, but answers should not be expected to survive contact with chemistry.

Then Dave moved to the next stage.

“Now take all the bones from the cupboard, put them in the mortar and pestle and grind them into bone dust.”

Myles paused.

“So bone dust is an ingredient for electronics?” asked Myles, looking confused.

“Nope,” replied Dave, “but it’s used to make epoxy, and epoxy is one of the ingredients for making electronics.”

There it was.

The moment where Icarus revealed that advanced electronics are built from copper, gold, tree goo, powdered skeletons, and hope.

Somewhere, an electrical engineer quietly closed the game and went for a walk.

“Fantastic, now gather up all the wire, epoxy, and resin and make as many electronics as possible,” instructed Dave.

“Why are we making electronics?” queried Myles.

“So we can make a refrigerator,” responded Dave.

“And we need one of those for?” asked Myles.

“So I can have a cold beer,” said Dave.

There was a pause, spiritually if not mechanically.

Then, wait for it…

Ding.

“Hey, I levelled,” noted Myles.

And there it was. The sacred truth of XP generation. Not adventure. Not combat. Not exploration. Not heroic sacrifice beneath an alien sky.

No.

Industrialised busywork.

“And that is how you generate XP,” Dave pontificated. “Take all the stuff we gathered, turn it into other stuff, then combine it to make tech stuff, which you then use to make white goods so I can have a cold beer.”

Myles installed the refrigerator and wired it up to the grid.

The base now had refrigeration. Civilisation had arrived. It had taken mining, hunting, grinding bones into powder, processing organic resin, manufacturing electronics, and maintaining a biofuel economy powered by mass fish composting, but the future was finally within reach.

Now the group just needs to learn how to make beer.

Which, given current trends, will probably require platinum, yeast, mammoth cartilage, three elephants, and Craig digging a basement under the kitchen.

How Are the Crops Growing?

Meanwhile, Craig was doing a great job watering and harvesting crops.

This sentence is worth dwelling on, because it represents one of those rare moments where Craig was not immediately setting fire to the social contract.

Craig watered. Craig harvested. Craig kept the farm moving. He demonstrated responsibility, discipline, and an unexpected ability to operate within the boundaries of agricultural civilisation.

If only the group could get him to put the crops in the pouches in the secret stash.

There is always a catch.

Myles took the coffee crop to the trader to sell and returned with 360 Ren.

This was not merely good income. This was an economic revelation.

To place that figure in proper perspective: six hours spent hunting across two sessions, butchering wildlife, skinning it, drying the meat, and shipping it to corporate schmucks in orbit earns 350 Ren.

Craig, managing crops for one session, generated 360 Ren worth of coffee.

This means the coffee economy is outperforming the blood economy.

The group has discovered that shooting bears, skinning animals, drying meat, and engaging in orbital logistics is less profitable than Craig remembering to water plants.

This is both pleasing and deeply annoying.

It also suggests that Icarus is not, in fact, a brutal alien survival game. It is a warning about margins in agribusiness.

The Titanium Mining Project

Dave also made the long trip out to the titanium mine to refuel the generator and bring back the resources.

This was grunt work in its purest form: long distance, low glamour, low XP, high usefulness. The sort of job that must be done, but which no sane person would describe as “content.”

He returned with 280 titanium.

That was double what the group recovered from the cave of wonders.

The cave of wonders, therefore, must now be spoken of carefully. It is still a cave. It is still full of resources. It still has the sacred glow of ten slightly disappointing light bulbs.

But the titanium mine has quietly walked into the room, put its feet on the table, and announced that everyone else has been wasting their time.

Desert Mission — Revisited

While mining, farming, generating XP, and doing chores occupied the rest of the group, the hunting and finalisation of last week’s meat delivery mission were outsourced to Zaph.

This was sensible. Zaph is efficient. Zaph is calm. Zaph is a tactical sniper who treats wildlife not as an ecosystem, but as a distributed logistics problem with legs.

Zaph spent hours travelling the map, hunting bears, looking for mammoths, and trying to find an elephant. He moved through the desert like a patient professional, searching for the large animals required to complete the mission while everyone else contributed to the growing industrial refrigerator cult.

At one point, Zaph returned to base to get a better skinning knife made by Craig.

This is worth noting because it shows that Craig can occasionally contribute to precision work, provided the task involves making something sharp enough to remove valuable parts from dead megafauna.

As Zaph wandered the desert in search of elephants, he lamented the absence of giant animals.

This was understandable. Icarus has a particular talent for hiding the exact thing needed for a mission until everyone is tired, slightly resentful, and beginning to say things like “statistically, there should be one here.”

“If only you had the animal-attracting radar,” said Dave.

This was not a comment.

This was a hint.

Myles took the hint, found the radar, grabbed a can of biofuel, and headed for the desert.

Meanwhile, Craig had discovered attachments.

This phrase should concern everyone.

Craig, who had discovered attachments, used a lot of resources to build a better shotgun. The phrasing alone suggests the birth of a new era. One imagines Craig standing before the workbench like Tony Stark in a cave, except instead of building the first Iron Man suit, he is constructing something that will eventually be fired too close to the furniture.

Myles and Zaph set up in the cave of wonders, turned on the radar, and let the elephants come to them.

This is the sort of sentence that sounds clever until one remembers elephants are enormous, angry, and very private.

Railings were placed to slow the smaller animals. This was not defence so much as a polite suggestion to nature that it queue properly before eating everyone.

“How is it going?” asked Dave over the radio.

He could hear gunshots, elephants screaming, and Myles swearing in reply.

“So it’s in the bag then,” said Dave.

And it was.

Four elephants later, Zaph acquired the tasty giant steaks, dried them, and delivered them. He even let Myles snack on dried meat that was not needed for delivery, which is how generosity looks when everyone involved has spent the evening weaponising radar against endangered megafauna.

The group received its 350 Ren reward.

Which, again, is 10 Ren less than Craig earned from coffee.

This should trouble the corporate schmucks in orbit. It will not. They are in orbit, eating artisanal dried elephant and filing procurement forms.

The Bridge Folly Revisited, and Why Tonight’s Campfire Song Was Cancelled

Then came the bridge.

Or, more accurately, the causeway.

Or, more accurately still, the ongoing architectural wound where a causeway used to be before fortification, panic, intention, reinterpretation, and Craig all took turns expressing themselves.

Craig asked permission to remove the fortification and replace the missing causeway section.

Dave denied this simple request.

In an ordinary group, that would have been the end of it.

In CCF, that was merely the beginning of the legal phase.

Craig, never one to be stopped by bureaucracy or building regulations, waited until everyone had left for other tasks. This was wise in the same way that raccoons wait until the kitchen light is off.

Then he obeyed the letter of the law whilst stomping all over the intent.

Yes, the missing section was still missing.

Yes, the fortified wall remained intact.

Technically, nothing forbidden had been removed.

But now a set of stairs and a raised walkway crossed over them, restoring the causeway’s functionality.

This was not compliance. This was compliance wearing a fake moustache.

Craig had not rebuilt the causeway. Craig had created a vertical loophole. A raised walkway. A workaround in physical form. A civil engineering appeal lodged directly against Dave’s authority.

And Craig did not stop there.

He wired it up and covered it with lights.

The result looked like the entrance sign for a Las Vegas all-you-can-eat buffet and strip club.

This was a bold aesthetic choice for a survival base on a hostile alien planet. Most groups might aim for defensible, tasteful, understated, possibly “rustic frontier outpost.” Craig went with Vegas fever dream visible from orbit.

Dave was less than impressed.

He pointed out the deer crossing the elevated causeway to Craig.

“Bears don’t climb stairs,” noted Craig, “so we are safe.”

This was flawless logic if the only threat in the game were bears, and if bears had signed a treaty promising to respect stairs.

“We don’t have a freaking bear problem,” Dave exclaimed, “we have a wolf and man-eating horse problem, so you can explain to Myles why he is dead the next time he goes AFK in the house.”

This is the sort of sentence that only makes sense after years of gaming together.

It contains tactical assessment, wildlife taxonomy, frustration, and a pre-emptive obituary for Myles, who in this scenario has wandered AFK in the house and been eaten because Craig built a brightly lit predator-access promenade.

“And close the doors — were you born in a tent?” Dave stomped away.

This, too, is part of the ancient rite.

Doors are the hinge upon which civilisation turns. Craig treats them as decorative suggestions.

Then came the final decree.

“And tonight’s musical interlude is cancelled. And take down those damn lights, it’s draining the battery. I need the power for my cold beer project!”

So the campfire song was cancelled.

Not because morale was low.

Not because the group lacked instruments.

Not because the alien planet was too dangerous for music.

The song was cancelled because Craig had turned the causeway into a luminous predator runway and Dave needed the power for refrigeration.

This is the kind of internal politics that will one day destroy the base. Not meteors. Not wolves. Not elephants. Power allocation.

Did We Learn or Achieve Anything This Week?

Yes.

The group learned that elephants really like their privacy, and they hate radar scanning, and it takes a lot of elephants to get any giant meat.

This is an important scientific discovery. It may not survive peer review, but it was made under field conditions involving live ammunition, swearing, and dried steak, which is more than can be said for many academic studies.

Last week, the promise was to tune in this week to see if:

The group could find the animals to finish the meat mission.

Done.

The group could strip-mine cave of wonders 2.0.

Done.

Dave would apologise to Craig for the epic Jenga disaster.

Don’t hold your breath.

Sturnim would join before the group finished.

Not a chance.

As for individual achievements, the records show:

Dave achieved Grunt Work by doing the menial, long-distance, no-XP work that keeps civilisation limping forward while everyone else enjoys the illusion of progress.

Myles achieved XP Engine by learning the ins and outs of maximising XP, and Chill by installing a refrigerator.

Craig achieved Cropped by managing the farm, producing coffee, and accidentally demonstrating that agriculture is more profitable than violence. He also achieved, unofficially, Civil Engineering Contempt of Court.

Zaph achieved Nailed It by finishing the annoying animal-killing quest with the cold focus of a man who understands that sometimes friendship means wandering the desert for hours so everyone else can argue about light bulbs.

Tune In Next Week

Tune in next week to see if Dave invents cold beer.

Tune in next week to discover what is hiding in the waterfall in the desert.

Tune in next week to find out whether the group can sell all the vestiges collected for more than coffee makes.

And tune in next week to see whether Craig’s illuminated causeway becomes a harmless architectural compromise, a death funnel for wolves, or the first venue on Icarus to offer a seafood buffet, neon signage, and absolutely no responsible door policy.