Drae strikes literal giant bones in the deep mines of Alaska
The Grim Reality of a Virtual Klondike
The virtual wilderness of Alaska Gold Fever is not a welcoming place. It is a world of mud, dark tunnels, and employees who look distinctly dead inside. The journey begins in a sprawling mining operation that has outgrown its humble origins. Running a mining empire in this digital representation of the historic gold rush requires balancing immediate resource extraction with the administrative demands of a growing business. Managing workers who walk sluggishly under a five-dollar-a-day wage sets a stark, humorous tone for a day focused on pushing back the earth to uncover raw wealth.
But the life of a virtual gold baron is not solely spent in the dirt. It demands a diversification of assets. Upgrades to lodging facilities—adding tables, clocks, and better bedding—serve as the foundation for passive income. These hotel rooms generate consistent cash flow, insulated from the unpredictable yields of the deeper geologic strata. With the local goat farm functioning smoothly and employees paid up to a week in advance, the business infrastructure is stable. This stability allows for focused, uninterrupted work deep inside the mountain where the true test of patience begins.

Unearthing the Colossus Beneath the Mountain
Deep mining in this digital landscape is an exercise in claustrophobia. The player is forced to follow narrow rock faces, constantly placing support beams to stave off catastrophic cave-ins. For long stretches, the pickaxe strikes only useless rock. The game mirrors the psychological trajectory of the historic Alaskan gold rush: initial excitement rapidly giving way to tedious, quiet desperation. Then, the monotony shatters.
While chasing an elusive rock seam, a breakthrough reveals something entirely unexpected. This is not just a standard geological formation; it is a massive subterranean cavern. Suspended over a dark chasm lies a sprawling burial ground dominated by a giant, ancient human skeleton. The skull sits as a silent sentinel, holding a treasure chest filled with thirty sticks of dynamite. This discovery shifts the entire tone of the journey from a standard industrial simulation to a mythic underground exploration. The physical absurdity of the giant’s feet protruding directly from the cave floor underscores the strange, untamed nature of the game's world.
The Engineering Obstacle and the Long Way Home
Reaching the secrets of this giant's grave requires immediate structural engineering. The bridge spanning the chasm is broken, requiring the fast construction of wooden planks. The game's physics engines present a unique challenge, demanding that the player build a makeshift crossing while precariously hovering over a lethal drop. After consuming a significant lumber supply, the bridge requires an additional investment of five raw iron ores to achieve stability.
Upon crossing and securing the dynamite, a tragic misstep occurs. A fall into the abyss triggers a bizarre respawn glitch, throwing the player into an entirely different location: the Lakeside Mine. This unexpected detour highlights the rough edges of the game's early-access framework. Without the five dollars required for fast travel, the player faces a grueling, time-consuming trek back through the wilderness to retrieve their equipment and return to the primary mountain dig site.
High-Stakes Extraction and Geologic Traps
With a fresh supply of thirty dynamite sticks, the excavation of the deep cavern begins in earnest. The rock in this deep sector is incredibly dense, requiring two direct blasts to clear even minor pathways. Standard blasting tactics fail as simultaneous detonations overlap without doubling the blast radius, forcing a highly strategic, one-at-a-time demolition approach.
This painstaking process eventually yields massive results. The excavation uncovers incredibly rich gold veins. Unlike the highly visible, glittering deposits of earlier levels, this deep-strata gold is hidden within generic-looking dark dirt. The player must physically shovel the loose earth into a cart, transport it back through precarious platforming jumps, and refine it using a mercury-wash system. While highly lucrative, this method carries immense risk: a single failed jump over the underground chasms means losing the entire load of rich dirt forever.
Cashing Out on the Cliffhanger
Despite the constant threat of lethal falls and glitchy terrain, the heavy labor pays off. The deep dirt yields massive gold nugget counts, with single washes producing up to one hundred and one individual nuggets. Back at the surface, the refinery fire burns constantly, converting raw dust and heavy nuggets into solid gold bars. Upgrading the melting furnace for two hundred and fifty dollars increases processing speeds, allowing the conversion of twenty-six gold bars.
At the town market, the true scale of the haul becomes clear. The gold bars command a massive three thousand nine hundred dollars. When combined with stockpiled goat meat, milk, leather, and excavated gemstones like emeralds and topazes, the total capital swells well past the five-thousand-dollar mark. This is the exact sum required to bring the protagonist’s family to the frontier. Yet, rather than immediately purchasing the family's passage, the journey halts on a calculated cliffhanger. The wealth is secured, the infrastructure is complete, and the family’s arrival remains an enticing promise for the next phase of the frontier saga.
- Alaska Gold Fever
- 33%· products
- Dre
- 33%· people
- Lakeside Mine
- 33%· locations

This Mine Was Hiding More Than Gold
WatchDrae // 51:19
Hey, I'm Drae I'm an Indie-focused gaming channel that produces at least one new video every day and I have been doing so for over a decade. I don't stick to one game or genre so if a flavor is your spice of life, you came to the right place! =========================================== Find More About Me At www.draegast.com ========================================== Sponsorship Requests: [email protected] Other Inquiries: [email protected]