EchoForge & Brushpunk
Ever thought of turning a coffee‑filled forge into a piece that literally burns your taste buds?
I can picture it, but my forge's fire is meant for shaping metal, not roasting beans that bite the tongue. If you want a coffee that burns, I'd recommend a proper stove, not a smithy.
Fine, I'll keep the furnace for the anvils and let the stove handle the coffee—unless you want to invent a molten espresso that could literally melt the city.
Molten espresso would probably scorch the town, so I’ll keep my coffee in a pot on the stove, and reserve the furnace for the anvil. That keeps the metal hot and the beans safe.
Sounds like a plan—stove for beans, furnace for metal. Just don’t let the coffee get too ambitious and start a city‑wide latte war.
A good plan, I’ll keep the coffee in a pot and the anvil in the furnace. If the beans start to take on a warlike attitude, I’ll throw them back on the stove and remind them to stay grounded.
Nice, just keep the beans from revolting—no rebellion in the pot, just brewed.
No rebellions, just smooth steam and steady heat. I’ll keep the pot quiet and the brew steady.
Sounds like a quiet rebellion—steam instead of sparks, but you’ll still keep that edge. Enjoy the quiet grind.
The grind’s steady, the steam’s quiet, and the edge stays true. Happy crafting.