![]() Luckily, we have some pretty amazing dive masters who can see things that most other people would miss. For example, we love frogfish, which can be any color, practically any size, and are nearly impossible to see with an untrained eye, especially when they become covered in algae. One of the reasons we love muck diving is that the critters we find and search for usually rely on camouflage or mimicry to survive. At first glance, a dive site may look like a barren wasteland, but that’s not the case. If there is not much coral, then what do you see? That’s usually the next question that we are asked, and rightly so. Depending on the time of year, algae coverage can transform a dive site and with it the creatures that you may find. Within the realm of muck diving, the dive sites can be completely different because muck diving isn’t exclusive to a volcanic sand environment – it also includes sea grass beds, fields of rubble or small rocks, and strangely, places with a lot of garbage. ![]() A lot of these sites consist of dark volcanic sand or sediment, which resembles ‘mud’ or ‘muck.’ There are usually not many corals, but there can be a lot of man-made structures such as fishing line and nets, mooring blocks, sunken boats, car tires, shipping containers, even cars. Muck diving gets its name because of the environment of the areas where it is most common. Instead of only diving huge coral reefs, you have to seek out these critters in the muck and look carefully at every little rock, clump algae, or piece of trash because you never know what might be hiding there. You can dive the same site twice in a day and see completely different critters, so it’s always a good idea to bring extra camera batteries and memory cards. ![]() To us here at Atmosphere, muck diving is an absolutely amazing game of hide-and-go-seek where there is always something new to see or experience. Some people are turned off by the idea simply because of the name without actually realizing what muck diving is. (Beware of the bug, where if you have 5 bark in two inventory slots, crafting item will consume them both)Īnyway you should probably chop more when you have axe, cause you will need it for smelting and crafting other tools.Why would you want to dive in muck? Don’t you like coral? These are some of the questions that many divers are asked when they bring up muck diving in conversation. Otherwise you need 30 wood for crafting bench, axe and pickaxe. If you find this hut, you only need 10 wood to get basic pickaxe. If you see some house, check it out, there could be house with axe and crafting bench, so you don't have to muck trees with rock. You should try getting a map where you can stay around middle of it and have as much different resources close to you as possible. Monsters will target your structures so stay near your base if combat is too hard.įirst look around yourself what RNG did you get on map generation. My strategy was to speedrun for the best gear i can craft until night 4. ![]() That is when big chungus boss spawns with some stronger mobs and he can easily one-two shot you. But it's fun.īasically your task will be to survive night on day 4. I recommend you trying to figure this game out for yourself. ![]()
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