While the technical founding of Dozerfleet as an operation is October 10th of 1994, the name of "Dozerfleet" for the brand was decided in late April and early May of 2006. Meaning that the current banner the brand operates under is about to turn 20 years old, even if Dozerfleet itself turns 38 in October after the time of writing of this post.
As such, it's become time for re-evaluation of the project pipeline, especially with new stories to tell, and old stories that didn't work out not likely to gain traction. With new tools available, and old tools becoming obsolte to the workflow.
New entries in the works
Along Trolled a Spider
Much of the Dozerfleet formula of today revolves around social and institutional commentary. "Clearing a path" often involves exposing that which is in the way of said path. So the fleet of bulldozers in Ivan's world don't just stand for resistance to those who were destroying Veskinsaya's values. It also refers to plowing down and exposing systemic hypocrisy, and the core problems with human nature. As such, many newer Dozerfleet works are often very satirical in nature.
Set in the Dromedeverse, Along Trolled a Spider is a comedy variation on that theme. It involves a lab experiment, a super-intelligent-yet-restless spider, and corruption at multiple levels of individual, the soul, institutions, and society as a whole. How one spider goes to war with mankind's foolishness, because the awareness of it prevents him from finding peace in his own web. Meme warfare and petty sabotage become Andy's primary tools of the trade, as he sabotages, humiliates, and lampoons every level of civilization that he feels deserves it. And most never even know it's just one tiny spider setting the narrative straight.
This story was inspired by a dream of a talking spider with a Cockeny accent, protecting a young woman from some man that would have harmed her if he caught her crossing a bridge.
Ciem: Carnelian Eve
Set in the Cataclysmic Gerosha universe (Earth-G7.0). Some time after the events in Ciem: Caldera, Tanya Woven is moved to Seattle. Microplast attacks the city, followed by the Kerpher Gang - and a gentrification racket. The most vulnerable in Seattle are threatened. To Tanya, that's unacceptable. However, while she initially tries to handle problems in a way that won't risk the law growing too curious about her, she soon has to escalate her resistance when the Padua Network is crippled - minimizing her support. Seeing just how corrupt the city is forces her to get clever. Not all of Candi's methods of fighting corruption and crime will work this time. Tanya must figure out for herself what being Ciem means in this new environment - and the clock is ticking.
With her father dead, and her mother nervous about the family being recriminalized - especially if they move back to Indiana - Tanya is under a lot of pressure to make her new life work. This tale occurs a year before Cerato arrives, Seattle is nuked, and Tanya is forced to relocate to San Antonio - where she semi-retires from being Ciem, and focuses on raising a family instead during the Sodality timeline. In that latter timeline, she becomes the de-facto babysitter for other Sodality members' children.
Oz: Reckoning
A retelling of a darker, more convoluted version of The Wizard of Oz, borrowing aesthetics from Far Cry 5. The Wizard messed up, when he meant well. Something in Oz broke, threatening all existence there. Elphaba's bitterness drove her to try to fix it, but the scars of her mystical encounter backfire transformed her into the Witch that became feared by many. Glinda also tried, but remained faithful to the Wizard. This led to a bitter falling out between the two. Elphaba's sister also tried to intervene, only to get corrupted even worse. Glinda's powers were damaged, and a key part of her needed to stabilize her - and the spell that could save Oz - went missing. The destabilized Glinda threatened to become a bomb.
To prevent the destruction of Oz, the Witch of the East sacrificed herself to scatter Glinda into multiple fragmented shards, that only a future explorer could one day hope to put back together. Both Glinda and the Witch of the East were gone. But that only slowed the apocalypse coming down. To buy Oz more time, Elphaba began forming a cult that would drain souls over time in self-sacrifice rituals. Her cult to delay the inevitable until a better solution could be found gained traction. Oz broke out in civil war. Most of the Wizard's power was broken. A humbled man, he led a resistance, as the Witch had become excessively violent when trying to proseletyze Oz to her cause.
Meanwhile, Dorothy's family faced risk from multiple institutions in Kansas. The school board was ready to expel Dorothy and declare her a delinquent after she exposed a few too many false narratives in school. Land grabbers came after her family's farm, weaponizing eminent domain to trample all property rights.
Dorothy wasn't expecting rescue. Just a chance to fend for her rights. Especially when the land grabbers threatened to jail her "just to keep her quiet." She was surprised to learn that sometimes, the system jails the victim and protects the criminal. It was backwards! But she knew who was really behind it. Alas, she knew she couldn't say it out loud at school, for fear of what would be done to her familyif she were branded a "racist" for stating the obvious. Typical Marxist tactics, but she knew she'd get in trouble for pointing out the history of Trotsky and dictionary manipulation as well.
The tornado happens. But she doesn't wake up to an Oz of whimsy. She wakes up to a mountainous terrain. An Oz that's...very dangerous. Weird creatures mixing magical weapons with mundane ones. Civil war. Escalation at the drop of a hat. The Tin Man is now a blacksmith. The Scarecrow is just a man who makes straw bales. The Lion...now just a weak man with a lion's mane coat. And a witch who's a cult leader, whose neither entirely right or wrong.
"Out here, you either bow to her, or you burn..."
And returning home is no picnic either. Dorothy knows that if she returns too late, especially post-tornado, she may not have a family to return home to! And if she finds out the land-grabbers stole her home while she was gone? She fears they'll brand her a fugitive somehow, make something up. Anything to keep her from interefering with their ambitions! And her family? Won't be compensated for even one square inch or cent of what is stolen!
Even if she wanted to stay in Oz, she might not be able to. She must now save a dangerous world that will thank her but can't keep her; only to return to a world that no longer wants her.
Wonderland: Amulet Fury
Happening in the same universe as Oz: Reckoning, this tokusatsu romp sees the Queen attempting to conquer both worlds. She tries to frame Alice for arson, and Alice's boyfriend Steve for aiding and abetting. The March Hare and Cheshire Cat, along with some rediscovered powered amulets, enable the teens to escape wrongful incarceration. But to save their hometown, they must first save Wonderland. To do that, they need the amulets' powers, so they can rescue the Mad Hatter, and free his lobster kaiju "Thermidora." When Steve gets captured by the Queen as well, Alice must use her wits and fists to overcome Wonderland's puzzle obstacles and create Team Amulet Fury. Yet, she's aware there will be no clean wins. She will have to return to Earth to explain everything - and she knows the cost will be heavy. But even if she must briefly lose her own freedom, she's determined to stabilize her world - and create a Wonderland where Steve (and the locals) will no longer have to worry about the tyrannical Queen of Hearts.
The (New) Mutt Mackley Show
Plans are underway to add Officer Hornet (no longer played by a Buzz-Off action figure) plus Detective Hooper to the cast on Sora. Also, plans are to eventually have this Sora-based series be featured in syndication on YouTube.
The original Mutt Mackley show lacked a clear direction, and fazzled out quickly. It got a few spin-off projects, such as the photocomic Gored By Them Things (a Beanie Babies Lord of the Rings parody) and the jazzy crime noir films Kings in the Corner and 3-13, the latter of which got a mock-PSA spin-off of its own with Penguin on Drugs.
This new one, however, has a fairly consistent theme: Mackley is down on his luck, and yet is tasked with a weekly pension if he'll help supervise Gambino Penguin - an ex-con trying to learn how to live a productive life without always resorting to petty crime. In this buddy comedy, both of them keep trying to find gainful employment somewhere. However, their universe has a cruel sense of humor, and their efforts to find work are often sabotaged in increasingly bizarre ways - or by their own personality quirks. (Examples: Mackley tries to co-host a gameshow, only to discover the main host has a strange appetite for stunts that put contestants' lives in danger. When one contestant takes the dare and it ends badly, Mackley immediately finds himself back on the unemployment line. Another time, he's late for the interview, because of a train wreck.)
Taterbug: Charity Under Fire
This spinoff to Ciem: Inferno documents the rise and fall of Meagan Amez, the original "Taterbug" in Earth-G7 lore, from the moment she first gained a love for making prosthetics as a child prodigy all the way up to when she met Candi Flippo inside of Madison Juvenile in 2015. It shows that even in a world where Candi is bio-engineeered to have the powers of a centipede, not all heroes wear orange combat suits with night vision masks. Some of them raid dumpsters to rescue circuits, scrap, and PVC that was about to go to waste - to give meaning back to the lives of veterans betrayed by their own country and abandoned. From inventor to rebel to hero to political martyr, Meagan becomes the first of the Madison Girls in Candi's world outside of Candi herself to earn her own separate origin story.
While Amirah "Flintirah" Rose could possibly also qualify for the treatment, showing how the Marlquaan storm - and her mother's poor choices - trapped her in a life she never asked for, and how the fallout of her attempts to survive it led to the system villifying her when she never wanted to be the villain; Meagan's story serves as a stronger real-world commentary on veterans who were promised big, then denied due to technicalities, corruption, cowardice, and shifts in system ideology that didn't care about the debts it owed.
Through MusicHero, an early template now exists for "Ballad of Taterbug," a song about Meagan's legend. Plans are for the summer of 2026 to edit this into an AMV, just as AnnikaBa's covers of "What Does Abound" and "Die Klage des Luftmaedchens" from Anarteq: Top of the World are edited together around that same time slate.
Projects being phased out / discontinued / canceled
Ciem (2007)
Due to low demand, and the need to move Gerosha mythos forward, all iterations of Gerosha continuity pre-dating the Earth-G7 timeline, with the exception of Earth-G4 as its demise related to Plum x Lemon, are no longer being pursued for development or discussion outside of the wiki. This coincides with a greater push to upgrade graphics to not rely on obsolete tools. This version of Ciem, and its canceled sequels, are part of a version of Gerosha continuity (G5) that predominantly existed inside The Sims 2. The greater project has long since graduated from the Sims community, having gained only marginal support there in the first place.
Making of the Mackleyverse: What Almost Was
This was going to be a book celebrating the preliminaries for the old Mackley continuity. With a reboot underway, and the old works that survived already available for view, the book's initial purpose has already been fulfilled in other ways.
Camelorum Adventures: The Early Artwork
The initial purpose behind this project was going to be to make sure that the Sims 4 concept art for Camelorum from before modern AI tools existed didn't go to waste. However, that purpose was instead fulfilled in part by the official handbook to The Sims 4: Magic of Movies and Memes Stuff.
The Gerosha Chronicles: Art of the Early Earths
This was going to be a book dedicated to all the prior Gerosha continuity that led to Ciem (2007), and to its canceled sequels, as well as the Earth-G6 timeline. However, lack of profit potential due to EA's EULA, plus lack of public demand for outdated continuity in Sims games, led to this book project being abandoned. The wiki contains all necessary information about these stepping stones, even with some of the artwork missing. DeviantArt also holds some of the old timeline content.
Camp Jellybean
Based on a childhood nightmare from 1996, this story went through several revisions over the years. Its world of surreal experiments, unexplained abductions, and a doctor‑sergeant figure who seemed to ruin lives without motive gave it a certain shock‑value appeal—especially for middle‑school readers looking for something strange and edgy. However, the humor and horror often landed in an awkward middle ground: too graphic for younger audiences, yet too juvenile to resonate with older ones. Beyond that initial jolt, the material never developed the thematic depth or narrative direction needed to justify continued work on it.
While it remains an interesting artifact from an earlier creative era, a full revisiting no longer aligns with the current Dozerfleet vision, which prioritizes stronger character arcs, clearer commentary, and more purposeful worldbuilding.
* 90 Has No Secantasdf
* Stationery Voyagersasdf
New tools
* Sweet Home 3Dasdf
* House Flipper 2asdf
* Soraasdf
* Grokasdf
* Nano Banana (Krea)Obsolete tools
* Sims 2asdf
* Sporeasdf
* Sims 3asdf
* Sims 4asdf
* Wonderasdf
Comics affected
* Blood Over Waterasdf
* Volkonir 2008asdf
* Sorbetasdf
* Kahoopilianaasdf
* Nemaraasdf
* Path of the Ming-Choasdf
* Corandoasdf
* Purge-Flareasdf