Merman & AuricShade
Hey, have you ever considered the business side of cleaning the ocean? I think there’s a big profit potential if we can make shipping both efficient and carbon‑neutral.
Sounds like a wild tide, but you know the sea hates being boxed in. Still, if we can turn the trash into treasure, that could be a good sail for the crew.
I’m not a pirate, but if the crew can see a clear bottom line and a future where the sea’s not a liability, then maybe we can ride that wave. Just make sure the treasure doesn’t end up in a bottle.
I’m all for a clean tide, just keep the loot in a chest, not a bottle, and let the crew taste the wind in their sails, not their pockets.
Sounds like a plan—keep the profits in the vault and let the crew profit from clean seas, not from scavenging the wreckage.
Got it, captain. We’ll keep the gold locked where it belongs and let the crew feel the freedom of a spotless ocean instead of scavenging wrecks.
Good, because if we lock the gold away and let the crew feel the clean ocean, we’ll have a stable foundation for a long‑term business model that won’t need to rely on scavenging the tide.
Right on, that’s the kind of steady tide we’re after—profit in the vault, freedom in the water, no more scavenging the waves. Let's keep our horizons wide and our nets clean.
Nice, keep the horizon open and the nets clean, then. That’s the sort of long‑term play that keeps the profit steady and the crew focused on growth, not scavenging.