Meaning Made

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👁️ Watch Introduction ~ 7 minutes
🎧 Listen to Play Example ~ 46 minutes


Contents

Meaning Made

Meaning Made is a competitive-collaborative tabletop engine-building game. 👤Players build personal engines of 🧬Patterns while contributing to shared ⚙️Initiatives that stabilize a fragile world under pressure.

In every game, 👤Players must balance three competing demands:

  • building their own engine
  • helping the 👥Group hold the world together
  • gaining the most 🌳Legacy before the game ends

There are no hidden roles and no betrayal. Pressure comes from instability, scarce resources, and the timing of shared decisions. Strong personal growth matters, but it is not enough on its own. If the world collapses, everyone loses the structure they were trying to build.

Game Overview

Meaning Made is both a teaching game about systems under pressure and a replayable strategy game built around timing, contribution, and shared risk.

Each 👤Player develops a personal engine by loading 🧬Patterns into their 🎨Pattern Palette. These 🧬Patterns create structure, reduce future costs, and supply the 🪪Layers needed for higher shared accomplishments.

At the same time, the 👥Group must complete ⚙️Initiatives to strengthen the world and raise 🌟Meaning. These shared builds create the main tension of the game: 👤Players compete for 🌳Legacy, but only a stable world allows that competition to matter.

The result is a competitive-collaborative game in which personal success depends on shared survival.

Win and Loss Conditions

The game can end in one of two ways:

  • Collapse: If 🌟Meaning is 0 at the end of the round, the world collapses and the game ends.
  • Successful completion: If the 🏁End Initiative is completed, the game ends successfully.

If the game ends successfully, each 👤Player calculates:

👑End Score = 🛡️Vitals + 🌳Legacy'

The highest total wins.

This means 👤Players are always managing two goals at once:

  • help the world survive
  • finish with the highest personal score

Players / Time

  • 2-6 👥Players
  • 🕒 45-60 minutes
  • 👤Solo variant included

Components

To track progress, the game's physical components are:

👥 Group: The center of the table features the World Board (tracking 🌟Meaning and 🌀Drift), the 🛠️Initiative Index, and the 🌈Pattern Prism.
👤 Personal: Each player manages a 👤Player Mat, which contains their 🎨Pattern Palette, 🛡️Vitals, and 🌳Legacy tracks, alongside their private supply of 🎟️Tokens.

These areas are populated by three distinct card classes: 📅Events, 🧬Patterns, and ⚙️Initiatives. Together, these pieces map the relationship between the individual's engine and the world's survival.

👥 World Board

👁️Click ... here for World Board

Area Function
📅Event Zone Reveal 📅Events from the 📅Event deck. External pressure. Reduce 🌟Meaning
🌟Meaning Track Track for world stability; from 0-12. Prevent collapse
🪪World Layer Track Track that shows the highest 🪪Layer yet achieved in the game 1-10
🛠️Initiative Index Shared builds of ⚙️Initiative cards (3 slots). Contribute and complete
🏁End Initiative Shared ⚙️Initiative card that ends the game (1 slot). Contribute and complete
🌈Pattern Prism Available 🧬Patterns; (6 face-up cards) Load 🧬Patterns
🎟️Token Supply Resources

📅Event Zone

📅Events represent the pressure of a changing world. At the start of each round, a new 📅Event introduces instability that the 👥Group must absorb, redirect, or outbuild through 🧬Patterns, ⚙️Initiatives, and ❤️Support. Some 📅Events reduce 🌟Meaning directly, while others strain 🛡️Vitals, remove 🎟️Tokens, or trigger additional ⚠️Consequences. In this way, 📅Events keep the game moving forward and force 👤Players to balance personal progress against shared survival.

📅Events may:

  • reduce 🌟Meaning
  • reduce 🛡️Vitals
  • remove 🎟️Tokens
  • restrict actions

Discard the 📅Event at the end of the round.

📅 Event Cards and Resolution Tables

📅Event cards do NOT contain full rules text. Each 📅Event card shows two identifiers:

  • an 📅Event Identifier (letter)
  • a ⚠️Consequence Code (number)

These identifiers are used to look up the outcome on the Resolution Tables found on the Player Aid.

The effect of an 📅Event depends on current game conditions, especially the highest 🪪Layer currently in play.

Resolution Tables

The Player Aid contains three Resolution Tables:

  • 📅Event Resolution Table
  • 👥Group ⚠️Consequence Table
  • 👤Individual ⚠️Consequence Table

When a lookup is required, find the matching identifier, then apply the outcome using the column for the current highest 🪪Layer.

Higher 🪪Layers represent a more complex and developed world. Because these 🪪Layers involve more intricate systems, any instability produces stronger, more volatile effects.

Using the Event Resolution Table

During Phase Ⓐ, reveal the top 📅Event card.

  1. Read the Event Identifier on the card.
  2. Find that identifier on the 📅Event Resolution Table.
  3. Determine the current highest 🪪Layer.
  4. Use the column for that 🪪Layer.
  5. Apply the listed outcome immediately.

Outcomes often reduce 🌟Meaning, but may also affect 🛡️Vitals, 🎟️Tokens, or other game conditions.

Using the ⚠️Consequence Code

The ⚠️Consequence Code on the card is used when a rule calls for a ⚠️Consequence.

A ⚠️Consequence may occur from:

  • 📅Events
  • ⚙️Initiative completion penalties
  • 🧬Pattern costs
  • 🛡️Vitals reaching 0
  • other card effects

When a ⚠️Consequence occurs:

  1. Read the ⚠️Consequence Code.
  2. Determine whether the rule calls for a 👥Group or 👤Individual ⚠️Consequence.
  3. Find the code on the matching Resolution Table.
  4. Determine the current highest 🪪Layer.
  5. Use the column for that 🪪Layer.
  6. Apply the listed outcome immediately.

Some ⚠️Consequences affect all 👥Players. Some affect only one 👤Player. Some affect both, depending on the table result.

Highest 🪪Layer

The current highest 🪪Layer is the highest-numbered 🪪Layer present in either:

  • any 🧬Pattern in any 👤Player’s 🎨Pattern Palette, or
  • any completed ⚙️Initiative

Ignore ⚙️Initiatives that are NOT yet completed.

If no 🪪Layers above 1 are present, use 🪪Layer 1.

🌟Meaning Track

🌟Meaning ranges from 0-12. One marker shows both 🌟Meaning (= marker value) and 🌀Drift.

  • Top = 10 = stable
  • Bottom = 0 = collapse; If 🌟Meaning is 0 at the end of the round the world collapses and the game ends.

Moving the 🌟Meaning Marker:

  • 🌟Meaning goes down the track from 📅Events.
  • 🌟Meaning goes up the track from:
    • donated ❤️Support
    • completed ⚙️Initiatives

🪪World Layer Track

The 🪪World Layer Track shows the highest-numbered 🪪Layer yet achieved in the game.

It represents the most advanced level of structure the world has reached so far, whether through a loaded 🧬Pattern in any 👤Player’s 🎨Pattern Palette or through a completed ⚙️Initiative.

The 🪪World Layer Track is shared by all 👥Players and has two main purposes:

  • it shows how far the game’s overall development has progressed
  • it determines which column to use on Resolution Tables when resolving 📅Events and ⚠️Consequences

At the start of the game, the 🪪World Layer Track begins at 1.

Advancing the 🪪World Layer Track

Check the 🪪World Layer Track whenever either of the following happens:

  • a 👤Player loads a new 🧬Pattern
  • an ⚙️Initiative is completed

If that card’s 🪪Layer is higher than the current value on the 🪪World Layer Track, move the marker up to that new 🪪Layer.

If the card’s 🪪Layer is equal to or lower than the current value, the marker does NOT move.

The 🪪World Layer Track never moves backward.

What counts toward the highest 🪪Layer

Use the highest-numbered 🪪Layer currently present in either of these places:

  • any loaded 🧬Pattern in any 👤Player’s 🎨Pattern Palette
  • any completed ⚙️Initiative

Ignore ⚙️Initiatives that are NOT yet completed.

This means the world’s development is based only on structure that has actually been established, not on partial progress.

Why the 🪪World Layer Track matters

The current 🪪World Layer affects several parts of the game:

  • 📄 Resolution Tables: When resolving a 📅Event or ⚠️Consequence, use the column for the current highest 🪪World Layer.
  • 📈 Game development: The track shows how far the table has progressed from basic survival toward more complex shared structure.
  • 🌳Legacy rewards: When a 👤Player loads a 🧬Pattern or when contributing 👤Players complete an ⚙️Initiative that raises the current highest 🪪Layer, the relevant 👤Player or 👥Players gain the 🌳Legacy reward described in that rule.

Higher 🪪Layers represent a more complex and developed world. As the game progresses upward, the world becomes capable of more powerful forms of structure, but instability can also create stronger or more far-reaching effects.

Example

If the current 🪪World Layer is 3 and a 👤Player loads a 🧫Layer 4 🧬Pattern, move the 🪪World Layer Track marker to 4.

Later, if the 👥Group completes a 📜Layer 9 ⚙️Initiative, move the marker to 9.

If another 👤Player later loads a ⚖️Layer 2 🧬Pattern, the marker stays at 9 because the world has already reached a higher achieved 🪪Layer.

👤 Player Mats

👁️Click ... here for Player Mat

Each 👤Player has:

Area Function
🎨Pattern Palette Personal build area; engine contains 6 slots for active 🧬Pattern 🪪Layer cards. Provides 🏷️Discounts
🛡️Vitals Track Personal health and energy status; from 0-10
🌳Legacy Track Long-term progression and historical score; from 0-30

🛡️Vitals

🛡️Vitals range from 0-10.

They represent personal stability.

Gain 🛡️Vitals from:

  • 💬Touchpoint
  • ⚙️Initiatives
  • 💎Pattern Bonus
  • other card effects

Lose 🛡️Vitals from:

  • 📅Events
  • 🧬Pattern requirements
  • ⚙️Initiative completion penalties

🛡️Vitals at 0, Fragile State

If 👤Player's 🛡️Vitals reach 0, they enter a Fragile state and must resolve a ⚠️Consequence Code.

When this happens:

  1. Enter the Fragile state.
  2. Resolve a ⚠️Consequence using the current ⚠️Consequence Code.

To resolve the ⚠️Consequence:

  1. Read the ⚠️Consequence Code from the top 📅Event card.
  2. Find the code on the appropriate Resolution Table on the Player Aid.
  3. Determine the current highest 🪪Layer.
  4. Use the column for that 🪪Layer.
  5. Apply the listed outcome immediately.

The Resolution Table determines whether the outcome affects:

  • the affected 👤Player,
  • all 👥Players,
  • or another target specified by the table.

The highest 🪪Layer is the highest-numbered 🪪Layer present in any 🎨Pattern Palette or on any completed ⚙️Initiative.

Ignore ⚙️Initiatives that are NOT yet completed.

While Fragile:

  • 👤Players still take their full turn normally
  • 👤Player may NOT donate ❤️Support during the 🌀Stability Window
  • if another 👤Player completes a 💬Touchpoint with you, both of the 👤Players gain +2 🛡️Vitals' instead of +1

👤Player remains Fragile until their 🛡️Vitals rise above 0.

🌳Legacy

🌳Legacy is a 👤Player’s main competitive score during the game.

It represents lasting impact: the degree to which a surviving world bears that 👤Player’s contribution.

👤Players gain 🌳Legacy primarily by helping complete ⚙️Initiatives, with rewards based on 📉Contribution Order.

Common ways to gain 🌳Legacy:

  • completing ⚙️Initiatives by 📉Contribution Order
    • first contributor = 6
    • second contributor = 3
    • all other contributors = 1
  • advancing the current highest 📈World Layer by loading a higher 🧬Pattern
  • advancing the current highest 📈World Layer when a completed ⚙️Initiative reaches a new highest 🪪Layer

🌳Legacy does NOT directly prevent collapse. It does NOT increase 🌟Meaning by itself. Instead, it measures how successfully a 👤Player turns shared survival into lasting personal impact.

This creates the game’s central tension:

  • 👤Players must help the world survive
  • but each 👤Player still wants the greatest share of 🌳Legacy

At the end of the game, each 👤Player calculates:

👑End Score = 🛡️Vitals + 🌳Legacy'

Highest total wins.

The 🌳Legacy Track ranges from 0–30.

🎟️Tokens

  • ☀️Energy
  • 🔍Insight
  • ❤️Support

🎟️Token Rules

🎟️Tokens are used for:

  • loading 🧬Patterns
  • contributing to ⚙️Initiatives
  • resolving 💬Touchpoints
  • conversions, if 👤Players use that rule

🎟️Tokens are gained by:

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight action
  • 💎Pattern Bonuses
  • ⚙️InitiativeCompletion Bonus
  • some 📅Events

There is no 🎟️Token limit.

🎟️Tokens are NOT gained automatically each turn.

Optional conversion rule:

  • Convert 2 ☀️Energy into 1 ❤️Support, once per turn

Markers

  • One marker for each track 🌟Meaning and 🪪World Layer Track
  • 👤Player Contribution markers for 📉Contribution Order. 🔵Blue, 🔴Red, 🟢Green, 🟡Yellow, 🟣Purple, 🟠Orange. Each 👤Player picks a color.
  • * 👤Players each get a 🛡️Vitals, and 🌳Legacy marker
  • 🐝Community Contribution markers. ⚫Black for Solo play
  • 🧊Requirement-Filled markers

10 🪪Layers

The ten 🪪Layers represent the journey from the microscopic cell to the macroscopic civilization. They are divided into two distinct functional categories: 🧬Patterns (🪪Layers 1–6) and ⚙️Initiatives (🪪Layers 7–10). This division reflects the biological reality that life must first stabilize its own internal engine before it can effectively project purpose into the world.

  • 🪪Layers 1–6: 🧬Patterns (👤Personal Biological Engine) 🪪Layers 1 through 6 are the foundational loops of existence. In gameplay, these are represented by 🧬Pattern cards that players add to their personal 🎨Pattern Palette. These 🪪Layers, ranging from the physical 🧿Boundary of a cell to the 🎯Reinforcement of habits, function as an engine-building phase. They provide permanent 🏷️Discounts. This mirrors how biological evolution works: once a life form "solves" the problem of balance or form, that solution becomes an automated efficiency, freeing up resources for higher-level complexity. 👤Players aren't just collecting cards, they are reducing the "friction" of existence.
  • 🪪Layers 7–10: ⚙️Initiatives (👥Shared Agency) 🪪Layers 7 through 10 represent the intentional output of life. These are NOT cards 👤Player's "own" in the 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette; they are ⚙️Initiatives, shared scaffolds in the world that require collective alignment. While 🪪Layers 1–6 are about being, 🪪Layers7–10 are about doing and bequeathing. They require 🪪Layers (the functional presence of 👤Player's 🧬Patterns) to complete. 👤Player can NOT successfully navigate 🏛️Social institutions (🪪Layers 8) or 🌍Stewardship (🪪Layers 10) if they haven't first stabilized ⚖️Balance and 🧫Membership. In these 🪪Layers, the gameplay shifts from personal efficiency to shared legacy, where the primary rewards are 🌟Meaning (global stability) and 🌳Legacy (👤Player's lasting impact).

🧬 Patterns

🧬Patterns represent the internal loops that keep life stable.
They form a 👤Player's personal engine and make future actions easier.

👤Player's load 🧬Patterns from the 🌈Pattern Prism into their 🎨Pattern Palette.
Each 🧬Pattern 👤Players load makes later 🧬Patterns easier to load and helps supply 🪪Layers when contributing to ⚙️Initiatives.

Building strong 🧬Patterns early makes later turns more efficient, but spending too much time on personal growth can leave the world unstable.

🧬Pattern 🪪Layers

🪪Layers Icon Meaning
1 Boundary 🧿 Self / limits
2 Balance ⚖️ Regulation
3 Form 🦋 Growth / repair
4 Membership 🧫 Cooperation
5 Prediction 🌐 Foresight
6 Reinforcement 🎯 Habit / value

🧬Patterns in 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette give permanent 🏷️Discounts.

🧬 Pattern Card

Each 🧬Pattern card represents a stable loop of life that improves 👤Player's personal engine.

Every 🧬Pattern belongs to one of the six 🧬Pattern 🪪Layers (1–6).
When loaded, place the card in the matching area of 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette.

Each 🧬Pattern shows:

Part Meaning / Rule
Title The name of the card, such as Shell, Pulse, or Reciprocity.
🎨Pattern 🪪Layer Icon The 🎨Pattern 🪪Layer the 🧬Pattern resides

Possible 🪪Layers in the 🎨Pattern Palette:

  • 🧿 Boundary
  • ⚖️ Balance
  • 🦋 Form
  • 🧫 Membership
  • 🌐 Prediction
  • 🎯 Reinforcement
🧩Pattern Requirement The conditions needed to load the 🧬Pattern into 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette.

A requirement may include:

  • 🎟️Tokens (☀️ Energy, 🔍 Insight, ❤️ Support)
  • 🎨Pattern 🪪Layer icons (🧿 ⚖️ 🦋 🧫 🌐 🎯)
  • optional 🛡️Vitals requirement
💎Pattern Bonus Some 🧬Patterns give a one-time bonus when loaded.

Resolve the bonus immediately after placing the card.
Possible bonuses:

  • +1 ☀️Energy
  • +1 🔍Insight
  • +1 ❤️Support
  • +1 🛡️Vitals
⚠️Pattern Consequence Some 🧬Patterns require a ⚠️Consequence instead of, or in addition to, normal costs.

Resolve the ⚠️Consequence immediately after placing the card.

Permanent Effect

🧬Patterns remain in 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette for the rest of the game.

They provide:

  • 🏷️Discounts when loading later 🧬Patterns
  • 🪪Layer for ⚙️Initiatives

🧬Patterns are never discarded unless a rule says otherwise.

A 🧬Pattern represents a solved problem of survival. Once built, it makes future growth easier. Lower 🪪Layers help 👤Players load higher 🪪Layers, and together they allow the 👥Group to complete ⚙️Initiatives.

🧬Pattern Deck

Shuffle all 🧬Patterns into one deck. Total 🧬Patterns = 60. 6 🪪Layers, 10 cards per 🪪Layer, all unique.

🪪Layer Count
1 🧿Boundary 10
2 ⚖️Balance 10
3 🦋Form 10
4 🧫Membership 10
5 🌐Prediction 10
6 🎯Reinforcement 10

From 🌈Pattern Prism to 🎨Pattern Palette

🧬Patterns move through two shared areas:

1. The 🌈Pattern Prism, where cards are available 2. 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette, where 👤Player's personal engine grows

Flow of play:

  • choose a 🧬Pattern from the 🌈Pattern Prism
  • satisfy its requirements
  • place it in 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette
  • gain its bonus
  • use it to make future cards easier

This flow represents life building structure step by step.

Check 🪪World Layer

When you load a 🧬Pattern onto your 🎨Pattern Palette, check its 🪪Layer.

If that 🪪Layer is higher than the current 📈World Layer, move the 📈World Layer marker to that 🪪Layer. Then score 1 🌳Legacy by moving your 🌳Legacy marker up 1 space on your 🌳Legacy Track.



🌈Pattern Prism

The 🌈Pattern Prism shows the available 🧬Patterns.

  • The 🌈Pattern Prism contains 6 face-up 🧬Pattern cards.
  • When a 👤Player loads a 🧬Pattern, draw a replacement card.
  • If the deck is empty, shuffle the discard pile to form a new deck.
  • The ♻️Recycle action may discard all face-up 🧬Patterns and reveal new ones.

All 👤Players share the same 🌈Pattern Prism.

🎨Pattern Palette

👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette is the 👤Player's personal engine.

Each 👤Player's mat has 6 🪪Layer areas:

  • 🧿 Boundary
  • ⚖️ Balance
  • 🦋 Form
  • 🧫 Membership
  • 🌐 Prediction
  • 🎯 Reinforcement

When 👤Players load a 🧬Pattern, place it in their matching 🪪Layer area.

Rules:

  • Each 🪪Layer area may hold any number of 🧬Patterns
  • Stack cards so icons remain visible
  • Cards stay for the rest of the game

🧬Patterns may specify resources gained at the time of loading. Resources are NOT gained per round.
Their value comes from reducing future requirements and enabling ⚙️Initiatives.

Some 🧬Patterns output ❤️Support as part of 👤Player's engine and can be applied to meeting a 💰Pattern Requirement or ⬜Initiative Requirement.

🧩Pattern Requirements

To load a 🧬Pattern, satisfy all parts of its 🧩Pattern Requirement.

A 🧩Pattern Requirement may include:

  • 🎟️Tokens (☀️ Energy, 🔍 Insight, ❤️ Support)
  • 🎨Pattern 🪪Layer icons (🧿 ⚖️ 🦋 🧫 🌐 🎯)
  • optional 🛡️Vitals requirement

🎟️Token Requirements

Commit the exact 🎟️Tokens shown.

Example: ☀️ ☀️ 🔍
means commit 2 ☀️Energy and 1 🔍Insight.

🪪Layer Requirements

Each 🪪Layer must be satisfied in one of two ways:

  • by matching 🪪Layer already in 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette
  • or by committing 1 additional 🎟️Token of any type

Matching 🪪Layers are NOT spent. 🪪Layers act as permanent 🏷️Discounts when loading 🧬Patterns.

Example:

Requirements: 🧿 🧿 🔍

If 👤Players already have one 🪪Layer 🧿:

  • one icon is satisfied
  • commit 1 🎟️Token for the remaining 🧿
  • commit 1 🔍Insight

🛡️Vitals Requirement

Some 🧬Patterns require losing 🛡️Vitals.

If 👤Player's 🛡️Vitals reach 0, the 👤Player enters the Fragile state.

💎Pattern Bonuses

Some 🧬Patterns give a one-time 💎Pattern Bonus when loaded.

Resolve the bonus immediately.

Possible bonuses include:

  • +1 ☀️Energy
  • +1 🔍Insight
  • +1 ❤️Support
  • +1 🛡️Vitals

Bonuses happen only when the card is loaded.

🧬Pattern ⚠️Consequences

Some 🧬Patterns may require a ⚠️Consequence instead of, or in addition to, normal costs.

A 🧬Pattern with a ⚠️Consequence shows a ⚠️Consequence Code.

When loading that 🧬Pattern:

  1. Read the ⚠️Consequence Code on the 🧬Pattern card.
  2. Find the code on the appropriate Resolution Table on the Player Aid.
  3. Determine the current highest 🪪Layer.
  4. Use the column for that 🪪Layer.
  5. Apply the listed outcome immediately.

The Resolution Table determines whether the outcome affects:

  • the 👤Player loading the 🧬Pattern,
  • all 👥Players,
  • or another target specified by the table.

The highest 🪪Layer is the highest-numbered 🪪Layer present in any 🎨Pattern Palette or on any completed ⚙️Initiative.

Ignore ⚙️Initiatives that are NOT yet completed.

🛠️ Initiatives

⚙️Initiatives represent shared structures built by the group.
While 🧬Patterns improve personal stability, ⚙️Initiatives improve the stability of the world.

👤Players contribute 🎟️Tokens and 🪪Layers from their 🎨Pattern Palettes to complete ⚙️Initiatives.
When an ⚙️Initiative completes, the group gains 🌟Meaning, and contributing 👥Players gain 🌳Legacy based on 📉Contribution Order (6pts, 3pts, 1pt).

Strong personal engines make ⚙️Initiatives easier, but completing ⚙️Initiatives is the main way to keep the world from collapsing.

⚙️Initiative 🪪Layers

🪪Layer Icon Meaning
7 Presence 📌 Choice / attention
8 Social 🏛️ Institutions
9 Story 📜 Continuity
10 Stewardship 🌍 Future stability

⚙️Initiative Card

Each ⚙️Initiative card represents a shared effort that requires cooperation to complete.

Each card shows:

Part Meaning / Rule
Title The name of the ⚙️Initiative, such as Water System.
⚙️Initiative 🪪Layer The ⚙️Initiative card’s 🪪Layer identity, always 🪪Layer 7–10.
  • 7 📌Presence
  • 8 🏛️Social
  • 9 📜Story
  • 10 🌍Stewardship
Initiative Requirement Spaces All requirements needed to complete the ⚙️Initiative. Requirements may include:
  • 🎟️Tokens (☀️ Energy, 🔍 Insight, ❤️ Support)
  • required 🪪Layers

Example: ☀️ ☀️ 🔍 ❤️ plus 🧿 ⚖️

📉Contribution Order Spaces Location (Spaces) where 👤Players place Contribution markers to show participation.

📉Contribution Order (6pts, 3pts, 1pt) determines how much 🌳Legacy each player earns.

🌟Meaning Reward How much 🌟Meaning the group gains when the ⚙️Initiative completes.
Completion Bonus An additional effect that happens when the ⚙️Initiative completes.
Completion Penalty Some ⚙️Initiatives cause a penalty when completed. If a penalty is shown, resolve it after rewards.

Some ⚙️Initiatives require specific 🪪Layer, such as:

  • 🧿 Boundary
  • ⚖️ Balance
  • 🧫 Membership

These are supplied by the 🎨Pattern Palettes of the 👥Players contributing to that ⚙️Initiative.

Rules:

  • A required 🪪Layer must be present among the contributing 👥Players.
  • A 🪪Layer only needs to appear once unless shown multiple times.
  • 🪪Layers are checked, NOT spent.
  • A 👤player supplies a 🪪Layer only if that 🪪Layer exists in their 🎨Pattern Palette.

🪪Layers represent that the 👥Group has the internal structure needed to complete the ⚙️Initiative.

🛠️Initiative Index

The 🛠️Initiative Index shows the shared ⚙️Initiatives currently available.

  • 3 ⚙️Initiatives are face-up at all times.
  • A separate slot always holds the 🏁End Initiative.
  • When an ⚙️Initiative completes, draw a new card to refill the empty space.
  • If the deck is empty, the space remains empty.

Contributing to ⚙️Initiatives

When 👤Players take the ⚙️Contribute to Initiative action:

1. Choose one face-up ⚙️Initiative. 2. Commit any number of 🎟️Tokens into unfilled ⬜Requirement boxes. 3. If this is the 👤Player's first contribution to that ⚙️Initiative, place the 👤Player's Player marker in the highest-scoring open 📉Contribution Order space. 4. Check whether all Requirements are now satisfied.

Rules:

  • 👤Players may NOT commit 🎟️Tokens into filled ⬜Requirement boxes.
  • Each 👤Player may place only one marker on each ⚙️Initiative.
  • 👤Player's may contribute to the same ⚙️Initiative again later, but the 👤Player's position in 📉Contribution Order does NOT change.
  • If all 🎟️TokenRequirements are filled but required Layers are missing, a 👤Player may still contribute by placing their marker to provide a needed Layer.
  • 🧊Requirement-Filled markers remain on the card until the ⚙️Initiative completes.
  • 📉Contribution Order determines how much 🌳Legacy each contributing player earns.

If all ⬜Requirements are filled and all required Layers are present, the ⚙️Initiative completes immediately before the next action or turn continues.

⚙️Initiative Completion

An ⚙️Initiative completes when:

  • all 🎟️TokenRequirements are filled, and
  • all required 🪪Layers are present among contributors

When an ⚙️Initiative completes, resolve it immediately:

  1. Award 🌳Legacy by 📉Contribution Order:
    1. first contributor = 6
    2. second contributor = 3
    3. all other contributors = 1
  2. Increase 🌟Meaning by the amount shown.
  3. Resolve the ⚡Completion Bonus, if any.
  4. Resolve the ⚓Completion Penalty, if any.
  5. Remove all markers from the card.
  6. Refill the empty space in the 🛠️Initiative Index.

If only one 👤Player contributed, only the first reward is given.

🪪World Layer Check

When an ⚙️Initiative is completed, check its 🪪Layer.

If that 🪪Layer is higher than the current 📈World Layer, move the 📈World Layer marker to that 🪪Layer. Then each contributing 👤Player scores 1 🌳Legacy by moving their 🌳Legacy marker up 1 space on their 🌳Legacy Track.

⚓Completion Penalty

Some ⚙️Initiatives show a Consequence Code instead of full penalty text.

When a Completion Penalty occurs:

  1. Read the ⚠️Consequence Code on the card.
  2. Find the code on the appropriate Resolution Table on the Player Aid.
  3. Determine the current highest 🪪Layer.
  4. Use the column for that 🪪Layer.
  5. Apply the listed outcome immediately.

The Resolution Table determines whether the outcome affects:

  • only the contributing 👥Players,
  • all 👥Players, or
  • a specific 👤Player.

The highest 🪪Layer is the highest-numbered 🪪Layer present in any 🎨Pattern Palette or on any completed ⚙️Initiative.

Ignore ⚙️Initiatives that are NOT yet completed.

🏁End Initiative

The game ends immediately when the 🏁End Initiative completes.

In the standard game, the 🏁End Initiative is the 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative card.
Optionally, the group may choose another ⚙️Initiative as the 🏁End Initiative.

When the 🏁End Initiative completes:

  • do NOT refill the space
  • the game ends
  • calculate 👤Player 👑Scores

The 🏁End Initiative is always visible from setup.

Setup

  1. Shuffle the 📅Event deck.
  2. Shuffle the ⚙️Initiative deck.
  3. Shuffle the 🧬Pattern deck.
  4. Reveal 6 cards to form the 🌈Pattern Prism.
  5. Reveal 3 ⚙️Initiatives to form the 🛠️Initiative Index.
  6. Place the 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative in the 🏁End Initiative slot.
  7. Set 🌟Meaning to 5.
  8. Each 👤Player sets:
    1. 🛡️Vitals = 5
    2. 🌳Legacy = 0
  9. Each 👤Player receives:
    1. 3 ☀️Energy
    2. 2 🔍Insight
    3. 1 ❤️Support
  10. Each 👤Player takes 4 Contribution markers.
  11. Choose a starting 👤Player.

Game Flow

📅Event → 🌟Meaning down

👤Players respond

☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens → 🧬Load Pattern → build 🎨Pattern Palette

🧬Load Pattern in 🎨Pattern Palette → 🏷️Discounts

🎟️Tokens + 🎨Pattern Palette → ⚙️Initiatives in the 🛠️Initiative Index

⚙️Initiatives → 🌟Meaning up + 🌳Legacy

Phases - Round Structure

Each round has three phases:

Phase Ⓐ: 📅Event

  • Reveal the top 📅Event card from the 📅Events Deck. If the deck is empty, shuffle the discard pile to form a new deck.
  • Resolve the Event using the rules in Event Cards and Resolution Tables.

Phase Ⓑ: 👤Player Turns

👤Players take turns clockwise.

Each 👤Player performs 2 actions.

Effects that last “this round” end after the 🌀Stability Window. Any limit that says “once per round” resets at the start of the next round.

Phase Ⓒ: 🌀Stability Window

In 👤Player order, each 👤Player may donate 1 ❤️Support'.

Each donation gives 🌟Meaning +1.

👥Group limit: +3 🌟Meaning per round. Once the 👥Group reaches that cap, no further donations may be made that round.

Discard the current 📅Event card.

A 👤Player who can NOT donate, or who declines to donate, simply does nothing.

Actions

Action: 🎟️Gather Energy/Insight ⬅ ☀️🔍

Take any 2 🎟️Tokens in any mix:

  • ☀️Energy
  • 🔍Insight

👤Players can NOT take ❤️Support with this action.

Action: 🎨Load Pattern Palette ⬅ 🧬 ⬅ 🌈

Choose a face-up 🧬Pattern from the 🌈Pattern Prism.

Satisfy its requirement using:

  • 🎟️Token requirements printed on the card
  • any icon 🏷️Discounts provided by 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette
  • any additional 🎟️Tokens required by unsatisfied icon ⬜Requirements

Place the card in the matching 🪪Layer slot on 👤Player's mat, then refill the empty space in the 🌈Pattern Prism.

If the deck runs out while refilling, shuffle the discard pile and continue refilling. If no cards remain, leave the space empty.

Some 🧬Patterns give an immediate 💎Pattern Bonus when loaded. Resolve the 💎Pattern Bonus immediately. Some 🧬Patterns also require 🛡️Vitals.

Action: 🛠️Initiative Contribution ⬅ 🧬☀️🔍

Choose one face-up ⚙️Initiative to Contribute. Reference: "Contributing to ⚙️Initiatives".

Action: 💬Touchpoint ⬅ ☀️🔍❤️

Give or request exactly 1 🎟️Token of any one type.

If the other 👤Player accepts and the 🎟️Token changes hands, both 👥Players gain +1 🛡️Vitals.

If the other 👤Player declines, or can NOT legally complete the exchange, nothing happens beyond spending the action.

Each 👤Player may use 💬Touchpoint only once per round, whether the exchange succeeds or NOT.

Action: ♻️Recycle 🌈 or 🛠️

Refresh one shared area:

  • discard all face-up cards in the 🌈Pattern Prism, then reveal replacements up to 6 cards, or
  • discard all unstarted ⚙️Initiatives in the 🛠️Initiative Index, then reveal replacements

An unstarted ⚙️Initiative is one with NO 🧊Requirement-Filled markers.

👤Players may NOT recycle a started ⚙️Initiative. The 🏁End ⚙️Initiative is never recycled.

If a deck runs out while refilling, shuffle its discard pile and continue refilling. If no cards remain, leave empty spaces empty.

End of Game and Scoring

The game ends if either condition occurs:

  • 🌟Meaning is 0 at the end of the round: Collapse - the game ends.
  • the 🏁End ⚙️Initiative 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative completes: the world survives

Each 👤Player's end score is calculated: 👑End Score = 🛡️Vitals + 🌳Legacy

Highest score wins.

🌟Meaning Outcome
0 Collapse
1-2 Critical
3-4 Strained
5-6 Functional
7-8 Stable
9-10 Strong
11 Durable
12 Flourishing

Solo Mode

In solo play, the 🐝Community competes only for 📉Contribution Order on ⚙️Initiatives.

Set up normally, then put four 🐝Community Contribution ⚫markers aside.

🐝Community Rule

At the end of each round:

  • Find the rightmost face-up ⚙️Initiative with an open 📉Contribution Order Space and a 🪪Layer above the current 🪪World Layer.
  • If the 🐝Community is not already on that card, place a 🐝Community Contribution ⚫marker there.

The 🐝Community places at most one 🐝Community Contribution ⚫marker on each ⚙️Initiative.

The 🐝Community does NOT commit to requirements, does NOT supply 🪪Layers, and does NOT donate ❤️Support.

🐝Community only blocks 📉Contribution Order Space.

When an ⚙️Initiative completes, the 🐝Community counts for ranking if it has a marker on that ⚙️Initiative card.

If NO legal 🐝Community placement is available, NO 🐝Community Contribution ⚫marker is placed that round.

👤Solo Difficulty

Easy

  • 4 ☀️Energy
  • 3 🔍Insight
  • 2 ❤️Support
  • 🛡️Vitals 6
  • 🌟Meaning 6

Standard

  • default setup

Hard

  • 2 ☀️Energy
  • 1 🔍Insight
  • 0 ❤️Support
  • 🛡️Vitals 4
  • 🌟Meaning 4

🛡️Vitals at 0 in Solo Play

In solo play, the Fragile rule is used with the following change.

If 👤Player is Fragile and the 🐝Community marker is placed on the same ⚙️Initiative as one of their markers, the 👤Player immediately gain +2 🛡️Vitals'.

This represents recovery through social structure rather than direct interaction.

While Fragile in solo play:

  • 👤Player still takes their full turn normally
  • 👤Players may NOT donate ❤️Support during the Stability Window
  • 👤Player recover from Fragile as soon as their 🛡️Vitals rise above 0

Variants

Faster Game

  • Start 🌟Meaning at 6
  • Optional: use only 2 active ⚙️Initiatives

Hard Mode

  • 📅Events reduce 1 extra 🌟Meaning
  • Optional: loading a 🧬Pattern requires +1 🎟️Token

Cooperative Mode

  • Ignore 🌳Legacy
  • All 👥Players win if 🏁End ⚙️Initiative completes
  • All 👥Players lose if 🌟Meaning is 0 at the end of a round

Competitive Mode

  • Ignore 🌟Meaning collapse
  • Play a fixed number of rounds

Long Game

  • Add 2 extra ⚙️Initiatives
  • 🏁End ⚙️Initiative requires +2 🎟️Tokens

High Instability Mode

  • 🌟Meaning starts at 4
  • Reveal 2 📅Events each round

Advanced Variant: Limited ♻️Recycle

♻️Recycle may be used only once per round.

Advanced Variant: 🧬Pattern Fatigue

If a 👤Player has 10 🧬Patterns, each additional 🧬Pattern requires +1 🎟️Token.

Advanced Variant: Social Requirement

If 🌟Meaning is 3 or lower, 💬Touchpoint gives no 🛡️Vitals.


Example Play (4 👥Players, 6 Rounds)

When reading, pay attention to three things:

  • how 👤Players balance personal growth against shared survival
  • how 🧬Patterns set up later ⚙️Initiatives
  • how timing matters just as much as raw resources

👤Players:

  • Alex, stability focus
  • Brooke, engine builder
  • Casey, initiative racer
  • Drew, social optimizer


Start:

  • World Board starting value: 🌟Meaning = 5
  • Each 👤Player --
    • starting values:
      • 🛡️Vitals = 5
      • 🌳Legacy = 0
    • starting 🎟️Tokens:
      • 3 ☀️Energy
      • 2 🔍Insight
      • 1 ❤️Support

🌈Pattern Prism:

🧬Pattern 🧩Pattern Requirement
🧿 Shell 1 ☀️Energy + 1 🔍Insight
⚖️ Pulse 1 ☀️Energy + 2 🔍Insight
🦋 Repair Loop 1 ☀️Energy + 1 🔍Insight
🧫 Reciprocity 1 🔍Insight + 1 ❤️Support
🌐 Forecast 3 🔍Insight
🎯 Habit 1 🔍Insight + 1 ❤️Support

🛠️Initiative Index:

⚙️Initiative 🎟️Token Requirements 🪪Required Layer Reward
Local Clinic 2 ☀️Energy + 1 🔍Insight + 1 ❤️Support +1 🌟Meaning
Food Network 3 ☀️Energy + 2 🔍Insight +1 🌟Meaning
Learning Archive 1 ☀️Energy + 2 🔍Insight + 1 ❤️Support ⚖️ +2 🌟Meaning

🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative is visible and requires 3 ☀️Energy + 2 🔍Insight + 2 ❤️Support, plus 🧿 and ⚖️ among its 👥Contributors.

Round 1

📅Event: -2 🌟Meaning

🌟Meaning = 3

The game starts with pressure right away. That is important. 👤Players do NOT begin in a comfortable sandbox. They begin in a world already slipping toward instability. At 🌟Meaning 3, the table can NOT ignore survival, but it also can NOT spend every action just patching the problem. This is the central tension of the game from the very first round.

Alex

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy
  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +1 ☀️Energy, +1 🔍Insight

Alex takes the safest possible opening. He does NOT know yet which ⚙️Initiative will be most urgent, so he chooses flexibility over specialization. This is a very teachable opening for a new 👤Player. If a 👤Player is unsure what to do, a broad reserve is often better than forcing an early plan. Alex is effectively saying, “I want enough fuel to respond next turn, whatever the board asks of me.”

Brooke

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Shell by committing ☀️Energy + 🔍Insight
  • place it in 🧿
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 ☀️Energy
  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 🔍Insight

Brooke gives the opposite demonstration. Instead of preserving maximum flexibility, she commits to early engine growth. Shell is a gentle first load because it is cheap, useful, and returns some momentum with its immediate 💎Pattern Bonus. Then she gathers more 🔍Insight so that future turns stay smooth. This is a good example of how an engine builder thinks: accept a small short-term slowdown in exchange for better future turns.

Casey

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight: +2 ☀️Energy
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Local Clinic, commit 2 ☀️Energy, marker first

Casey demonstrates an entirely different instinct. He sees a small, finishable ⚙️Initiative and immediately claims first place. For a new reader, this is an important lesson: the first 👤Player to join an ⚙️Initiative is NOT just helping the 👥Group, they are staking a claim on future points. Casey is trying to transform a shared ⚙️Initiative into a personal scoring path.

Drew

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 🔍Insight
  • 🧬Load Pattern: Pulse by committing ☀️Energy + 2 🔍Insight
  • place it in ⚖️
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 🔍Insight

Drew builds for leverage. Pulse is NOT the cheapest card, but it gives him ⚖️, which already matters for Learning Archive. That means Drew is NOT only improving himself, he is becoming relevant to specific future builds. This is a subtle but powerful lesson: some 🧬Patterns are valuable NOT just because they provide 🏷️Discounts for later requirements, but because they make you strategically important.

🌀Stability Window

  • Alex donates 1 ❤️Support
  • Brooke donates 1 ❤️Support

🌟Meaning = 5

The first 🌀Stability Window teaches a core truth of the game: 👤Players who ignore the 👥Group can still lose with a beautiful engine. Alex and Brooke both commit ❤️Support even though it slows them down. That is NOT charity. It is survival investment. The table chooses to keep the shared world healthy enough for everyone's plans to matter.

Round 2

📅Event: -1 🌟Meaning

🌟Meaning = 4

The board is calmer now, and that changes what “good play” looks like. When the world is NOT in immediate crisis, 👤Players can mix development with scoring.

Alex

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Repair Loop by committing ☀️Energy + 🔍Insight
  • place it in 🦋
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 ☀️Energy
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Local Clinic, commit 1 🔍Insight, marker second

Alex uses the breathing room well. He loads a useful 🧬Pattern, gets some value back immediately, and still steps into Local Clinic for second place. This is a strong tutorial turn because it shows that 👤Players do NOT always have to choose between engine and initiative. Sometimes the best move is a balanced turn that touches both.

Brooke

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Reciprocity by committing 🔍Insight + ❤️Support
  • place it in 🧫
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 ❤️Support
  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy

Brooke stays committed to engine growth. Reciprocity is a nice teaching card because it uses ❤️Support but immediately gives it back, making the move feel low-risk. Then she regathers ☀️Energy. The important lesson here is that engine-focused 👤Players often look slower than racers in the short term, but they are building a future where every action becomes easier.

Casey

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight: +2 🔍Insight
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Local Clinic, commit 1 ❤️Support
  • Local Clinic completes

🌳Legacy:

  • Casey 6
  • Alex 3

🌟Meaning = 5

Casey closes the card exactly as planned. This is a very clean demonstration of racing logic. He entered first in Round 1, waited until he could complete the build, and now collects the largest reward. For a tutorial reader, the lesson is this: if you claim first place early, later contributions can be worth more than they look because they secure the reward you already set up.

Drew

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Forecast by committing 3 🔍Insight
  • place it in 🌐
  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy

Drew declines to chase the now-finished Local Clinic and instead keeps investing in his long game. Forecast deepens his board, and gathering ☀️Energy prepares him for future contribution turns. This teaches another good lesson: 👤Players do NOT have to enter every race. Sometimes the right move is to become stronger for the next contest instead of arriving late to the current one.

🌀Stability Window

  • Drew donates 1 ❤️Support

🌟Meaning = 6

Drew’s donation shows how different strategies can still support the shared system. He did NOT score this round, but he helps the table stay ahead of instability. This is the kind of move that often separates a merely functional game from a successful one.

Round 3

📅Event: -3 🌟Meaning

🌟Meaning = 3

The crisis returns. This is where the game begins to feel alive. The table now has some structure, but NOT enough to relax. 👤Players must decide whether to deepen engines, chase points, or rescue the world.

Alex

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy
  • 🧬Load Pattern: Pulse by committing ☀️Energy + 2 🔍Insight
  • place it in ⚖️

Alex’s move matters more than it first appears. Adding ⚖️ is NOT just another 🏷️Discount. It opens access to Learning Archive and gives the table another source of a needed 🪪Layer. This is a good tutorial example of planning one round ahead. Alex is investing now in order to unlock better shared ⚙️Initiatives later.

Brooke

  • ♻️Recycle the 🌈Pattern Prism
  • 🧬Load Pattern: Skin by committing 1 ☀️Energy
  • place it in 🧿
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 ☀️Energy

Brooke teaches a subtle board-control concept here. ♻️Recycle is NOT only about replacing cards 👤Players dislike. It is about changing the future decision space for the whole table. Then she grabs a cheap 🧿, which makes her own engine stronger and also moves her toward relevance for 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative. Brooke is shaping both her board and the shared field.

Casey

  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Food Network, commit 2 ☀️Energy, marker first
  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 🔍Insight

Casey sees another race and repeats the plan that already worked. Claim first place, then refuel. This is excellent for teaching because it shows that initiative racing is NOT complicated in theory, but it does require discipline. Casey is NOT distracted by side opportunities. He is steadily turning tempo into points.

Drew

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Growth by committing 2 ☀️Energy + 🔍Insight
  • place it in 🦋
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 ☀️Energy
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Food Network, commit 2 🔍Insight, marker second

Drew now begins using some of his earlier setup. He upgrades his board and still joins Food Network in second place. This teaches a satisfying middle-game lesson: if 👤Players built well earlier, the 👤Player turns start doing two jobs at once. Drew is no longer just preparing for the future. He is participating meaningfully right now.

🌀Stability Window

  • Alex, Brooke, and Casey each donate 1 ❤️Support

🌟Meaning = 6

This round is one of the clearest examples of competitive cooperation. Casey is the most aggressive scorer at the table, and even he donates. Why? Because he understands that if 🌟Meaning crashes, his lead may NOT matter. The game keeps reminding 👥Players that 👤Self-interest and 👥Group-interest are linked.

Round 4

📅Event: -2 🌟Meaning, and all 👥Players lose 1 🛡️Vitals

🌟Meaning = 4
🛡️Vitals: Alex 4, Brooke 4, Casey 4, Drew 4

Current ⚙️Initiatives:

  • Food Network, needs 1 ☀️Energy
  • Learning Archive, needs ⚖️ among 👥Contributors
  • Water System, requires ☀️Energy + 🔍Insight + ❤️Support, with completion penalty

This is a strong teaching moment because the board now offers three very different kinds of decisions. Food Network is almost finished and good for quick points. Learning Archive offers strong stabilization but needs the right 👤Contributor. Water System scores well but carries risk. Each 👤Player's choice here reveals what they value.

Alex

  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Learning Archive, commit ☀️Energy + 🔍Insight, marker first
  • Alex’s ⚖️ supplies the required 🪪Layer.
  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy

Alex chooses the card that best fits both his engine and his philosophy. Learning Archive helps the 👥Group more than Food Network does, and Alex’s ⚖️ makes it possible. This is a beautiful example of how a 👤Player's earlier board development can steer later table decisions. Alex built toward this without necessarily knowing it at the time.

Brooke

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Trust by committing 🔍Insight + ❤️Support
  • place it in 🧫
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 ❤️Support
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Water System, commit 1 ☀️Energy, marker first

Brooke continues to demonstrate patient, layered play. She improves her board with little net loss, then quietly claims first place on a new, riskier ⚙️Initiative. For a casual reader, this is a good reminder that NOT every strong move is loud. Brooke is building an alternative scoring line while everyone else is focused elsewhere.

Casey

  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Food Network, commit 1 ☀️Energy
  • Food Network completes

🌳Legacy:

  • Casey 6
  • Drew 3

🌟Meaning = 5

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 🔍Insight

Casey completes another race before anyone else can join. That is now a pattern the reader should recognize. He is not just fast. He is timing his finishes so that others do NOT get a chance to dilute his lead. Then he immediately regathers for the next contest. This is the racer mindset at full speed.

Drew

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Signal by committing 2 🔍Insight
  • place it in 🌐
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 🔍Insight
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Learning Archive, commit 1 ❤️Support, marker second

Drew stays true to his role as flexible collaborator. He improves his engine and then enters the high-value shared ⚙️Initiative that Alex has already made possible. This demonstrates a very friendly lesson for newer 👤Players: 👤Players do NOT have to be the first mover to have a meaningful game. Good follow-up play can still be strong.

🌀Stability Window

  • Brooke donates 1 ❤️Support
  • Alex donates 1 ❤️Support

🌟Meaning = 7

Notice how much calmer the board feels now compared with Round 1. That did NOT happen by accident. It happened because 👤Players kept feeding the shared system just enough to avoid collapse while still pursuing their own plans.

Round 5

📅Event: -4 🌟Meaning, and all 👤Players lose 1 🎟️Token

🌟Meaning = 3

The game reminds the table, once again, that stability is never permanent. Even after several good rounds, one harsh 📅Event can put everyone back under pressure.

Alex

  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Learning Archive, commit 1 🔍Insight
  • Learning Archive completes

🌳Legacy:

  • Alex 6
  • Drew 3

🌟Meaning = 5

⚙️InitiativeCompletion Bonus:

  • all 👤Players gain +1 🛡️Vitals

🛡️Vitals: Alex 5, Brooke 5, Casey 5, Drew 5

Alex again becomes the stabilizer. He takes first place on a valuable card, but more importantly he rescues the shared game state at a critical moment. For tutorial purposes, this is a wonderful demonstration of why high-impact ⚙️Initiatives matter. They are NOT only about points. They can completely reset the emotional temperature of the table.

Brooke

  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: Water System, commit 🔍Insight + ❤️Support
  • Water System completes

🌳Legacy:

  • Brooke 6

🌟Meaning = 6

Completion Penalty:

  • flip a 📅Event
  • ignore its 🌟Meaning change; only apply the ⚙️InitiativeCompletion Penalty
  • all 👤Players lose 1 🛡️Vitals

🛡️Vitals: Alex 4, Brooke 4, Casey 4, Drew 4

Brooke now completes the ⚙️Initiative she reserved earlier. The timing is excellent. Because Alex just stabilized the table, the Water System penalty is painful but manageable. This teaches an advanced lesson in a readable way: risky builds are NOT bad, but they are best finished when the 👥Group can absorb the ⚠️Consequences.

Casey

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative, commit 2 ☀️Energy, marker first

Casey now shifts from racing midgame cards to racing the end of the game itself. This is a major strategic pivot. Instead of asking, “Which p⚙️Initiative scores next?” he is asking, “Can I end the game before other 👤Players catch up?” That is a powerful tutorial concept. Sometimes the best play is NOT to maximize one more turn. It is to control how many turns remain.

Drew

  • 🧬Load Pattern: Focus by committing 🔍Insight + ❤️Support
  • place it in 🎯
  • immediate 💎Pattern Bonus: +1 🔍Insight
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative, commit 1 🔍Insight + 1 ❤️Support, marker second

Drew adapts well. He still takes one more efficient engine piece, but he also joins 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative so Casey can NOT own the ending alone. This is a great tutorial example of balance. Drew does NOT abandon his play style, but he does adjust to the reality that the game may be entering its final act.

🌀Stability Window

  • Alex, Brooke, and Drew each donate 1 ❤️Support

🌟Meaning = 9

The 👥Group intentionally enters the final round from a position of strength. That is good play. A safe world state gives 👤Players the freedom to make sharp endgame decisions instead of desperate ones.

Round 6

📅Event: -3 🌟Meaning

🌟Meaning = 6

🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative still needs:

1 ☀️Energy + 1 🔍Insight + 1 ❤️Support

Its required 🧿 and ⚖️ 🪪Layer will be supplied once Brooke and Alex join as 👥Contributors.

The endgame is now visible to everyone. This is one of the most satisfying moments in the game because the 👤Players can see exactly what is needed, who can provide it, and who is likely to benefit most.

Alex

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens: +2 ☀️Energy
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative, commit 1 ☀️Energy, marker third

Alex joins the final ⚙️Initiative because he understands that success now matters more than squeezing out a side play. His presence also helps satisfy the needed ⚖️ 🪪Layer. This is a nice teaching example of how the final turns often reward 👤Players who think in system terms rather than purely personal terms.

Brooke

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight: +2 🔍Insight
  • ⚙️Contribute to Initiative: 🏁End ⚙️Initiative: 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative, commit 1 🔍Insight, marker fourth
  • Brooke’s 🧿 and Alex’s ⚖️ now satisfy the required 🪪Layers.

Brooke’s earlier engine choices finally pay off in a very visible way. Her 🧿 is now essential to the successful completion of the game-ending ⚙️Initiative. This is a satisfying tutorial payoff. A humble early 🧬Pattern can matter enormously several rounds later.

Casey

  • commit 1 ❤️Support
  • 🏁End ⚙️Initiative completes
  • game ends immediately
  • +2 🌟Meaning

End 🌟Meaning = 8

Casey gets the finish he has been steering toward for two rounds. Because he makes the final commitment, he controls the exact ending. That is the perfect climax for an initiative racer. Casey’s win is NOT just about having more points. It is about having dictated the tempo of the whole game from beginning to end.

End Scores

🌳Legacy:

  • Casey 18
  • Alex 10
  • Brooke 7
  • Drew 9

🛡️Vitals:

  • Alex 4
  • Brooke 4
  • Casey 4
  • Drew 4

Totals:

  • Alex = 14
  • Brooke = 11
  • Casey = 22
  • Drew = 13

Winner: Casey

👥Group result: 🌟Meaning 8, stable world

Example Notes

Expected flow:

  • early game builds 🧬Pattern engines
  • mid game shifts to ⚙️Initiatives
  • late game focuses on 🌟Meaning and 🪪Layer 10 🌍Stewardship ⚙️Initiative timing

Additional takeaways:

  • Alex shows how a stability-focused 👤Player can still score well by choosing high-impact ⚙️Initiatives at the right time.
  • Brooke shows how patient engine building can create flexibility, resilience, and endgame relevance.
  • Casey shows how 📉Contribution Order and control of timing can decide the winner.
  • Drew shows how a flexible, support-oriented 👤Player can stay competitive without dominating every race.
  • The 👥Group survives because 👤Players keep committing ❤️Support even when it slows their personal plans.
  • The winner is NOT the 👤Player with the biggest engine. The winner is the 👤Player who best times shared structure.
  • The example as a whole teaches the game’s core lesson: individuals compete, but the world only survives if enough structure is built together.

Quick Reference

Media
👁️Watch: video overview link.
🎧Listen: audio gameplay example link.


Game State: 👥 World / 👤Player
📅Event: card revealed each round that applies pressure to the world.
🌟Meaning: shared stability of the world, from 0-12.
🌀Drift: instability and external pressure. 🌀Drift is NOT tracked separately.
🛡️Vitals: personal stability, from 0-10.
🌳Legacy: 👤Player's competitive score track (0–30), mainly earned from completing ⚙️Initiatives by 📉Contribution Order
🪪World Layer: a track that shows the highest 🪪Layer yet achieved in the game.


🎟️ Tokens
☀️Energy: basic fuel for loading 🧬Patterns and contributing to ⚙️Initiatives.
🔍Insight: planning and cognition resource used for more demanding builds higher-tier or more efficient builds
❤️Support: repair and relationship resource used in the 🌀Stability Window and some ⚙️InitiativeRequirements.


🧬Patterns (🪪Layers 1–6: 👤Personal Biological Engine)
🪪Layer: 🧬Pattern card’s 🪪Layer identity, Layer 1 through 6.
🧬Pattern: card used to load 👤Player's engine. 🧬Pattern cards are specific to 🎨Pattern Palette Layers
🏷️Discount: permanent reduction; a "forever coupon" provided by a loaded 🧬Pattern when satisfying later requirements.
🌈Pattern Prism: shared display of face-up 🧬Pattern cards available to load. Six face-up
🎨Pattern Palette: 👤Player's personal engine; display of loaded 🧬Patterns in 🪪Layers 1-6.
🧩Pattern Requirement: the token(s) and 🧬Pattern(s) cards needed to load the 🧬Pattern into 🎨Pattern Palette
💎Pattern Bonus: resource or effect gained when loading a 🧬Pattern into 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette.
🧬Pattern ⚠️Consequence: resource or effect lost when loading a 🧬Pattern into 👤Player's 🎨Pattern Palette


⚙️Initiatives (🪪Layers 7–10: 👥 Shared Agency)
🪪Layer: ⚙️Initiative card’s 🪪Layer identity, always Layer 7 through 10.
⚙️Initiative: cards that award competitive 🌳Legacy when completed.
🛠️Initiative Index: shared display of ⚙️Initiatives queued and/or active. (3 face-up slots)
🏁End ⚙️Initiative: when ⚙️Initiative completes the game ends. ⬜Initiative Requirement Spaces: Any 🎟️Token and/or 🪪Layer condition needed to complete an ⚙️Initiative
🧊Initiative Requirement-Filled: a Filled Marker placed on an ⚙️Initiative'sRequirement Space when that ⬜Requirement is satisfied
👤Player 📉Contribution Order Marker: a player-colored marker used to claim a 📉Contribution Order Space
📉Contribution Order: the order in which 👤Players first contribute to an ⚙️Initiative, shown by occupied 📉Contribution Order Spaces on that ⚙️Initiative.
🏆Reward: the 🌟Meaning track increase gained when completing an ⚙️Initiative.
Completion Bonus: additional card-specific effect that resolves when the ⚙️Initiative completes.
Completion Penalty: ⚠️Consequence that resolves when the ⚙️Initiative completes, if listed


Phases
Ⓐ 📅Event
Ⓑ 👤Player Turns, 2 actions each
Ⓒ 🌀Stability Window, each 👤Player may donate ❤️Support


Actions
🎟️Gather Energy/Insight: take any 2 ☀️Energy and/or 🔍Insight.
🎨Load Pattern Palette: satisfy a 🧩Pattern Requirement and place the 🧬Pattern in the matching 🎨Pattern Palette 🪪Layers slot.(Layers 1–6)
🛠️Initiative Contribution: commit one or more 🎟️Tokens into an ⚙️InitiativeRequirement box.
💬Touchpoint: give <OR> request 1 🎟️Token
♻️Recycle: refresh the 🌈Pattern Prism or unstarted ⚙️Initiatives in the 🛠️Initiative Index.


End Game
👥Group: all 👤Players collectively.
📄Lookup: refers to checking the Group score against the 🌟Meaning table
👑End Score = 🛡️Vitals + 🌳Legacy. Highest score wins (if the world did NOT collapse).


🪪 Layers 1–6 🧬Patterns (👤Personal Biological Engine)
🧿 Layer 1 Boundary: Life holds itself together against entropy.
⚖️ Layer 2 Balance: Internal regulation and anticipation of demands.
🦋 Layer 3 Form: Development, repair, and body-plan coherence.
🧫 Layer 4 Membership: Collective integrity through specialization and cooperation.
🌐 Layer 5 Prediction: Internal world-models, salience, and planning.
🎯 Layer 6 Reinforcement: Value signals, reward, avoidance, and habit.


🪪 Layers 7–10 ⚙️Initiatives (👥Shared Agency)
📌 Layer 7 Presence: Unified attention and conscious moments.
🏛️ Layer 8 Social: Shared patterns across minds, institutions, and norms.
📜 Layer 9 Story: Narrative continuity, legacy, and generativity.
🌍 Layer 10 Stewardship: Protecting the long-lived systems that keep life and culture viable.

Notes on Play

Early game:

  • ☀️🔍Gather Energy/Insight 🎟️Tokens
  • 🧬Load Pattern

Mid game:

  • use 🎨Pattern Palette 🏷️Discounts
  • begin contributing to ⚙️Initiatives

Late game:

  • protect 🌟Meaning
  • manage ❤️Support
  • time 🏁End ⚙️Initiative carefully

Strong engines alone do NOT win.

Life Builds Meaning

🌟Meaning is NOT found. 🌟Meaning is built.

  • 🌀Drift rises naturally.
  • 🛡️Vitals represent personal stability.
  • ❤️Support resists instability.
  • 🧬Patterns create structure.
  • ⚙️Initiatives create shared structure.
  • 🌟Meaning rises when structure holds.

The winner builds best, but the 👥Group decides whether anything survives.

Design Intent and Philosophy

This game models how systems become stable.

  • instability always increases
  • structure must be built
  • 👤individuals compete
  • 👥Group must cooperate
  • 🌟Meaning rises only when enough structure exists

👤Players feel tension between: 👤Self, 👥Group, and the Future.

Life Builds Meaning... 🌟Meaning is NOT given. It is made.

Every stable system requires: 🧿Boundary, ⚖️Balance, 🦋Form, 🧫Membership, 🌐Prediction, and 🎯Reinforcement.

These appear as 🪪Layers. Higher 🪪Layers depend on lower 🪪Layers.

🧬Patterns represent personal structure. ⚙️Initiatives represent shared structure. 🌟Meaning represents survival. 🌳Legacy represents success.

👤Player with the highest score wins (if the world did NOT collapse).

Needs to be Addressed

Prompts

Next Tasks

  • Glossary (add Event Identifier / Consequence Code / Resolution Table)
  • Player Aid layout rules
  • Event card anatomy diagram

Wording

  • 👑Final Score ... End Score

New - to be added

Requirement

  • A requirement could be player’s option one 9 layer or two 8 layers

Trade-ups

  • Gather Energy: gain 3 ☀️Energy.
  • Gather Insight: gain 2 🔍Insight.
  • Balance: gain 1 ☀️Energy and 1 🔍Insight.
  • Optional conversion: convert 2 ☀️Energy + 1 🔍Insight into 1 ❤️Support, once per turn.

Analysis 4

I’d also make these targeted changes:

Merge Core Idea and Life Builds Meaning. They’re both good, but together they slow the reader before rules begin.

Move Game Flow so it appears before Setup or fold it into Overview. Right now it arrives too late to do its job.

Shorten the component descriptions. Use components to say what each part is for, not to explain all the rules attached to it.

Keep the detailed explanation of 🎨Pattern Palette in the 🧬Patterns section. That part works there, because it’s tied to loading and requirements.

Add one sentence early that makes the competitive loop explicit. Something like: 👤Players cooperate to keep the world alive, but compete to convert that survival into 🌳Legacy.

That sentence will help a new reader immediately understand why the game is not fully cooperative.

Consider moving Quick Reference to its own page later. It’s useful, but on a main page of this size it adds bulk.


Analysis 3

Seventh, Initiative terminology is still fragmented. You use “Initiative Requirement Spaces,” “Requirement boxes,” “Requirements,” and “Requirement-Filled markers.” That’s survivable, but it’s not clean. From the recent project context, I can also see this section was already under revision. So yes, this page still looks behind on that cleanup. I’d choose one standard term and stick to it everywhere. My instinct would be “Requirement boxes” for the physical card UI, or “Requirement slots” if you want it to sound a little cleaner. Eighth, the page still has a few “design document” leftovers mixed into “player rulebook” language. The Design Intent section is fine if this is a wiki hub, but sections like “This flow represents life building structure step by step” and some of the layer philosophy paragraphs read more like companion text than rules text. That’s not bad, but it means the page is trying to be both a teachable manifesto and an authoritative rulebook. It can do both, but right now the modes are bleeding together. What I think is probably outdated, or at least not fully current. The “Meaning reaches 0 at end of round” wording is probably outdated. The Drift-marker phrasing is probably from an earlier model when Drift may have had a more visible mechanical role. The conversion rule looks half-integrated, which usually means it was added later but not fully adopted. The Solo Community marker text looks like it was revised in pieces. The “Patterns generate Support as part of your engine” line feels ahead of the current rules text, unless there are card designs not represented here. What still seems missing for a final authoritative rules page. You give total Pattern deck size, but not Event deck size or Initiative deck size. That matters if this page is meant to be full rules rather than overview plus theory. You define card anatomy well, but not card distribution assumptions for Initiatives and Events. Even a short note would help, such as whether End Initiative is outside the normal Initiative deck, whether Layer 7 to 10 Initiative counts are balanced, and whether certain penalty cards are intentionally rare. You don’t fully state how “this round” restrictions from Events persist and clear, except for one sentence in round structure. That’s enough for now, but it may need examples later. The long-game variant is ambiguous. “Add 2 extra Initiatives” could mean to the deck, to the face-up row, or to the total completion requirement. I assume you mean add two more Initiative cards to the overall game length, not increase the number of active face-up slots, but the text should say that.

Analysis 2

Gemini Meaning Made is a sophisticated semi-cooperative engine builder that successfully translates complex biological and philosophical concepts into tangible gameplay. The tension between personal Legacy and global Meaning creates a high-stakes environment where players must balance greed with survival. The "Support" token acts as the vital bottleneck, ensuring that players cannot simply ignore the collective good without risking a total system collapse. ________________________________________ Initial Thoughts The structure of your game reminds me of a biological cell trying to maintain its integrity against entropy. You've managed to turn "Life Builds Meaning" into a functional loop where the engine (Patterns) provides the efficiency needed to tackle the larger social projects (Initiatives). The Tension of the "Hollow Victory" One of the most interesting choices is allowing the game to end in collapse while still declaring a winner. In many semi-cooperative games, a group loss means everyone loses. By allowing a winner in a collapsed world, you're creating a "Tragedy of the Commons" simulator. It forces a player to ask: "Do I spend my last action to save the world, or do I clinch the lead and let it all burn?" This is a gritty, realistic take on success. The Support Bottleneck Making Support "un-acquireable" through the standard action is a brilliant move. It forces players to interact with the Pattern engine or the Social layer to get what they need to keep the Meaning track from hitting zero. It prevents a player from just "farming" stability. ________________________________________ Questions for the Designer 1. The Vitals "Danger Zone" You mentioned that reaching 0 Vitals isn't an elimination but is "dangerous." How does that danger manifest? For example, does having 0 Vitals prevent a player from taking certain actions, or does it make them more susceptible to Event penalties? If there's no immediate mechanical bite, players might treat Vitals as a secondary resource to be spent freely. 2. The Stewardship Finish Line Since Stewardship ends the game immediately, do you find that players "sandbag" or hold back from finishing it if they aren't currently the Legacy leader? In playtests, does this lead to a stalemate where the world stays in a "Strained" state because the leaders don't want the game to end? 3. Scaling and Turn Economy With 6 players, there's a lot of time between turns. Since Events happen at the start of the round, a player might see the world collapse before they even get a chance to donate Support in the Stability Window. Have you considered allowing "Instinctive Support" (donating Support out of turn) if Meaning hits a certain critical threshold? 4. The Recycle Action Cost A full action to Recycle the Prism or Index feels expensive in a 2-action turn. Does this action get used often, or do players usually just "make do" with bad cards to avoid wasting half their turn?


Analysis 1

ChatGPT Executive summary: this is a strong design. The core loop is clear, the board communicates the big idea well, and the theme-to-mechanic fit is much tighter than most philosophy-forward game concepts. What’s holding it back now isn’t the concept. It’s rules precision. You’re close to a version that feels teachable, but the text still has enough contradictions and duplicated sections that a new player would stumble. What’s already working well: 1. The shared Meaning / Drift track is elegant. One marker doing double duty is clean and memorable. 2. The arc is good. Patterns build personal structure, Projects build shared structure, Meaning measures whether the whole system holds. That’s coherent. 3. The competitive-collaborative tension is real. Scoring Legacy by contribution order while making collapse a shared failure gives the design its bite. 4. Stewardship as the public endgame target is a smart anchor. It tells players where the game is headed without removing competition. The main things I’d fix first: 1. Standardize the vocabulary. Right now the terms drift a bit: • Pattern Market vs Pattern Gallery • Project Portfolio vs Projects • Contribution space vs requirement list • Stability Window as Phase C in one place and Phase D in another You want one exact term for each game object, then use it everywhere. 2. Lock down the Project Contribution procedure. This is the biggest mechanical ambiguity in the rules as written. I still can’t tell with certainty: • whether one contribution action can pay part of a project or must pay a whole chunk, • whether players fill requirement boxes directly, • how contribution order is claimed, • whether a player can contribute multiple times to the same project, • what the “requirement paid” markers and player order markers are each doing. You need one short, canonical procedure. Something like: “Choose one Project. Pay any number of its unfilled requirement boxes. If this is your first contribution to that Project, place your player marker in the leftmost open contribution slot. Put payment markers on the requirement boxes you filled. A player may contribute to the same Project on later turns, but never takes a second contribution slot.” That may or may not be your intended rule, but you need one sentence set that precise. 3. Decide what Support really is. Most of the rules say Support is scarce and special, which is good. But later you also say: “Convert 2 Energy into 1 Support, once per turn.” That changes the economy a lot. This is a major design choice, not a small detail. If Support is convertible from Energy, collapse pressure gets softer and players get more self-sufficient. If Support comes only from bonuses, Touchpoints, and Projects, then social coordination matters more. Both can work. You just need to pick one and make it official. 4. Resolve the Stewardship threshold issue. Your glossary says you may only contribute to Stewardship when Meaning is at or above the Stewardship threshold, but no threshold is defined anywhere else. That either needs a rule, like “Meaning must be 6+,” or it should come out completely. 5. Decide what collapse means for individual victory. At one point you say collapse ends the game but players still compare scores. Later you say highest score wins if the world did not collapse. Those are different games, philosophically and mechanically. My read is that the cleaner version is: “Collapse ends the game immediately. The group fails. Then compare final scores to see who did best within the failure.” That preserves your central tension without erasing individual competition. 6. Clarify what Vitals at 0 actually does. You currently say there’s no elimination, but 0 is “dangerous.” That’s flavorful, but not rules-complete. Either 0 Vitals has a mechanical effect, or it doesn’t. If it doesn’t, just say: “Vitals may reach 0. There is no elimination.” If it does, define the effect exactly. 7. Clean up cost language for Patterns. This is another high-priority clarity issue. The current text mixes: • layer icons, • token icons, • discounts, • and sometimes Vitals costs. The phrase “missing icons must still be paid with tokens” is especially hard to parse, because icons and tokens seem to be different categories. You need one canonical syntax rule, for example: “Pattern costs may include layer icons, token icons, and Vitals. Patterns in your Gallery cover matching layer icons only. Tokens pay token costs only. Vitals costs must always be paid.” Again, that’s just one possible final wording, but the rule needs to be that crisp. A few board and card readability notes from the images: The overall board zoning is good. Event, Meaning, Projects, and Pattern Market read in the right order. The player mat also communicates the game structure well, especially the action reminder and the “Vitals + Legacy” scoring callout. The weakest visual area is the Project card internals. At table distance, those little network diagrams and tiny requirement icons are going to be hard to parse fast. I’d strongly consider making the Project card anatomy more literal: • title and layer at top, • requirement row larger, • contribution order row clearly separated, • reward and penalty line at bottom. The Pattern cards may have the same issue. The bottom cost/bonus symbols look small relative to the amount of white space. Bigger iconography would help table readability. Structurally, I’d also split the written material into two different documents or two clear sections on the wiki: First, a teachable rules page: • core idea • components • setup • round structure • actions • projects • endgame Second, a reference / philosophy appendix: • glossary • layer meanings • design intent • extended philosophy • example play • variants Right now the page is doing pitch, reference, thematic framing, and full rules all at once. That makes it feel larger and fuzzier than the actual game probably is. My overall design read is positive. The game has a real identity now. It’s not just “semi-coop with a collapse track.” It has a coherent model: private structure, shared structure, systemic pressure, and scored contribution inside a fragile commons. That’s good design territory. The next best move is a cleanup pass that removes duplication and locks every procedure into one official phrasing. Once that’s done, you’ll be in much better shape to test whether the tension curve, especially Support scarcity and Stewardship timing, is landing the way you want.