ArcticRiver is a free social round game for adults who want a quiet, no-money diversion. Virtual points only — nothing to deposit, nothing to withdraw, nothing to chase. We know long-river evenings feel best when they stay simple.
A free social round game made for adults — virtual points only, no real money.
Try the Game ›The balance you see during a round is invented for the moment. Nothing leaves your bank, nothing arrives in it. It is the same kind of token a board game uses.
An age confirmation appears the first time you arrive. We do not invite minors, and we will not pretend the reel page is for everyone. Adults only, every visit.
The reels rotate, the frost-mint stripe lights up, the round ends. There is no daily streak to keep, no badge to grind, no notification to chase. We like it that way.
Four of us put ArcticRiver together over a long Yukon winter. We wanted a round site that did not pretend to be more than it is — a quiet diversion in the colour of frost-mint and midnight navy, with a single round on offer and nothing to win except the next page-turn.
The point pool refills when it empties. The round ends when you close the tab. That is the whole shape of the site.
Read more about our workshop ›Open the Round Zone, set a stake from one to twenty-five virtual points, and watch the three columns settle. The columns hold six themed marks each — aurora ribbons, river bends, ice prisms, sled lanterns, raven calls, and a single frost-mint seven.
Matches across the five lines tally up to a number. Wins refill the on-screen point pool. Empty pool, or close the tab — either way, you are back where you started. The math is documented on the Round Zone page in plain language. Nothing is hidden in the JavaScript.
When you reload the site tomorrow, the point pool resets to its starting figure. Yesterday's round does not carry over. We thought that mattered.
The whole thing was meant to feel like a small Thursday-evening object. A page you open, look at for a while, and close. It is not a real-money venue, and we are not selling anything.
None of these are headline-grabbing. We wrote them down because the small choices are usually the ones that matter most over a long evening.
Every counter on the page is invented. There is no payment processor anywhere on the site, on the form, or on the back end.
The Round Zone shows the multiplier for each mark and each line, in points, with no superscript footnotes or asterisks.
The point pool refills whenever you press the reset key. There is no waiting period, no daily limit, no nudge to come back later.
The round ends when you leave the page. Nothing follows you out, nothing pings you, nothing emails you tomorrow morning.
We did not hire a behavioural designer. The interface is built to feel like a printed object, not a flicker reel meant to keep you scrolling.
If a round starts to feel like more than a Thursday-evening pastime, the help organisations on the responsible page are listed by name and phone.
We update the site every few weeks. The changes are usually quiet — a typography tweak, a wording revision, a fresh ridge backdrop. We log them here so the page does not pretend to be static.
The fifth mark on the round columns now reads cleanly at small viewports. We adjusted the silhouette and dropped a stroke detail that was muddying it.
We rewrote the responsible-round page in a warmer voice and added the GambleAware resource alongside the Canadian-leaning anchors.
The reset button now also clears the last-round readout and the autopilot counter, so re-opening the page after a long break feels fresh.
The cookies banner now mentions the two specific keys we set and explains why each one exists, in two short sentences.
If something is unclear, or you want us to add a question to this list, the contact page has a simple form.
Yes, in every sense. There is no checkout, no upsell, no premium tier. The point counter you see during a round is virtual and does not connect to any real account.
The round visuals are coded in the same idiom as a Canadian round venue. We do not want minors visiting under the impression that they are using a kid-friendly arcade. The age confirmation is the first gate at the door.
No. The point pool that refills on a winning line is virtual. There is no draw, no top prize, no leaderboard, no entry into anything. The site is an entertainment object, not a contest.
Two browser keys: an age-confirmed flag and a cookies-acknowledged flag. Both are local to your device. The privacy page lists them by name and explains why each exists.
The mindful-round page lists Responsible Gambling Council, Gamblers Anonymous, and GambleAware with their contact details. Each is independent of ArcticRiver and offers free, confidential support.
We did not pick Whitehorse because it is statistically central. We picked it because that is where the workshop is — a small office on Stephen Avenue with a view of the Yukon River.
The site reads in Canadian English. Where we mention an organisation, we use the Canadian spelling. Where we list legal references, we cite Canadian federal and provincial frameworks rather than European or American ones.
The address at the bottom is real. Mail does land at the door, and we read it.
If you are visiting from another province or another country, you are welcome — though the round itself looks the same everywhere, and the help organisations we link to are Canadian-leaning.
Quebec visitors who prefer French copy can email us. We do not yet ship a French build but we are reading.
The whole site is one PHP install with seven pages, one stylesheet, and a single round engine. There is no third-party widget, no analytics platform, no chat overlay.
If something feels off, the contact form is the right place.
Mindful-round resources ›We know some of our adult visitors will already have thought about how round-style entertainment fits into their week, and some will not have. Either way, the resources below are independent of ArcticRiver and offer free, confidential conversations in Canadian English.
If you find that a round is becoming a way to bypass an evening you would rather not face, that is worth noticing. None of the four of us are clinicians, so we will not write the script for that conversation. The organisations below will.
The round on this site is a free, virtual one — there is no real-money loss to recover from here. But the patterns of attention that round-style imagery engages do not always stay inside the tab. The mindful-round resources are listed for that reason.