One of the most celebrated aspects of The Adventures of Kincaid is its world-building. Esterhazy does not believe in a single universe. Instead, Kincaid travels across the "Shattered Archipelago," a multiverse of "Isles of Probability."
Kincaid does not want to be a hero. He wants to rest. But as long as there is an alternate timeline where a city needs saving, a memory-ocean needs crossing, or a friend needs a meal cooked by a pacifist robot, he will keep moving. The Adventures Of Kincaid
Then, on a Tuesday at 2:47 PM, his pen ran out of ink. One of the most celebrated aspects of The
This is not a post about luxury glamping or “finding yourself” on a paid retreat. This is a post about the raw, gritty, terrifying, and glorious reality of choosing the wrong path on purpose. He wants to rest
Esterhazy’s genius lies in how he weaponizes this trauma. Kincaid does not seek adventure; adventure crashes into him like a wave against a cliff. He stumbles through a dieselpunk metropolis in The Gears of Regret , only to be dragged through a portal to a fungal jungle in The Spore Emperor’s Court . The "adventure" is not the thrill—it is the price of his immortality.
Have you journeyed through the Shattered Archipelago? Share your favorite Kincaid moment in the comments below. And for those who hear the hum of other timelines—stay strong. The delay is the point.