Point and click to place blocks! Now with SUPER SOUPED UP INTERFACE! If you thought you'd seen it then, just wait until you see it now! M key opens menu.
Made for the SDS. Name is pronounced like SDS Ar kuh pel uh go. An archipelago is a short chain of small, rocky islands. Tile placing is partially inspired by Carcassonne, the board game Logbook of the captain of the New Expeditionary Venture In Lands Located Externally (NEVILLE) These newly discovered islands appear to be composed of some nebulous substance that defies description. New ones appear all the time, and old ones sometimes disappear without a trace. I would fear for my sanity, were not the crew and I in agreement. More after we land. The first of these islands appears uninhabited. Despite the unique characteristics of the terrain, it appears firm enough to walk upon, land on, and possibly even build a sauna (no island is complete without one). Though small, it contains two bodies of fresh water-an anomaly, given the salty sea that surrounds it. The second island, which is much larger, appears paired with the third. There is still no sign of habitation, although the great quantity of water appears to provide for much vegetation on the third island. The water stems from a wellspring, sourced in a rocky outcropping. Although the second island is also host to such a structure, no water flows from it that I can see. As I have only approached it from the northern side, I will endeavor to pass along the south on return. Perhaps there will be something. The fourth island is the largest and most curious yet. It is covered in greenery and contains a suspiciously symmetrical, apparently unsourced body of freshwater. To the north are four stone mounds, clearly artificial. Although no animal life has been sighted yet, there are clear signs of habitation. During our stay, the crew began toying with the sand, and, to their shock, found they could transform it with minimal effort to produce other materials. This could be useful... On the fifth island, smaller than the fourth but still large, there are no signs of habitation. This is despite the fertile soil, cherry trees, and ready supply of water. Perhaps it should be obvious why, when, having scaled the large stone feature near its center we discovered an active caldera! We depart now hastily for a nearby landmass far greater than any we have encountered. From here I believe I can see strange creatures, though it is doubtful they will surprise us more than what we have encountered so far...