About this project
About Cursor Camp Guide
Cursor Camp Guide is an unofficial fan resource for players who want a practical route, a checklist, and a clearer way to test the small interactions inside Cursor Camp.
Cursor Camp is played on Neal.fun, and that official page is the only place we send players when they want to enter the game. This site does not host, mirror, or embed a playable copy of Cursor Camp. The purpose here is guide work: collecting public observations, organizing completion routes, separating confirmed behavior from community reports, and giving players small helper tools that run locally in their browser.
The site was created for a short viral search window. When a browser game catches attention, players often need help before traditional wikis or large gaming publications have time to write focused material. A fast guide can be useful only if it adds real structure. That is why the first version includes a route-based walkthrough, a 17-slot seashell tracker, a badge checklist, recipe notes, a secrets page, a marshmallow trainer, and a cursor accessory previewer.
We treat accuracy carefully because lightweight games can change quickly. Some items are stable enough to call confirmed. Other items are community reports that deserve testing but should not be presented as guaranteed. Rumors are labeled as rumors. This matters for players because a vague or overconfident guide wastes more time than no guide at all.
The Spanish section exists because viral games do not stay inside English-speaking communities. Players search in their own language, and a direct translation of an English article is often not enough. The Spanish pages use the same structure as the English pages, but the labels, route explanations, and tool text are written for Spanish search intent rather than left as machine-looking fragments.
The tools are independent from the official game. The seashell and badge trackers save progress in local browser storage. The marshmallow trainer is a simplified practice surface for understanding distance around a flame. The accessory previewer is a planning canvas that helps players think about shell spending. None of these tools read official game data, write official game data, or require login.
Advertising may appear on the site because the project is meant to be sustainable during high-traffic windows. Ads should not block the guide, hijack navigation, or interfere with the tools. If an ad placement makes the page harder to use, the placement should be reduced before more content is added.
Cursor Camp Guide is not affiliated with Neal Agarwal, Neal.fun, or any official Cursor Camp project. Names and references are used only to identify the game being discussed. The best experience is still to play the official game first, then use this guide when a collectible, badge, or secret becomes hard to finish.
The editorial standard is simple: a page should either help someone finish a task, understand a mechanic, or decide what to try next. If a paragraph does not do one of those things, it should be removed or replaced with a clearer note. This is especially important for fast trend sites because publishing speed can easily turn into low-value repetition.
Future updates should come from direct play, community reports with enough detail to reproduce, and public videos that show the interaction on screen. When sources disagree, the guide should say so. A careful uncertainty label is more useful than a confident claim that sends players around the map for no reason.