The Scattered Atlas
“The map has lies; learning inks what’s true.”
The Voyagers adventure: midnight verification — dark chart-room, pale relief maps, bioluminescent teal.
A session in The Scattered Atlas
What actually happens when your Voyager sits down to work.
1. Set a heading
Sail to a real place
A real port on the living globe, chosen deliberately — no hand-holding, no cartoon mascot narrating every step.
2. Verify the record
Trace the anomaly
The old chart has errors. Verifying it is the maths or English underneath — real GCSE-level work, presented as evidence to check, not a worksheet to fill in.
3. Correct the chart
Ink what's true
The correction goes into the atlas. Come back after a break and it's a plain welcome back, not a penalty — the atlas waits exactly where it was left.
Arriving at a new harbour — Voyagers register.
What they're learning underneath the atlas
Maths and English today, with French and more subjects growing — every topic mapped to the KS4 / GCSE-prep curriculum, so you always know exactly what a piece of work covers. No numeric grades hidden inside a game — feedback speaks plainly, the way a 15-year-old expects to be spoken to.
What you see as a parent
You choose which subjects are switched on, set the difficulty, and pick the marking style that suits your child. Every piece of feedback is logged and reviewable by you, and you can see exactly which curriculum point a piece of work sits under.
One of three companions on offer at this band — free to start, no purchase required. Not a narrator; a presence on the voyage.