Community atlas
Public traveler pages built around the map, not buried under widgets.
This MVP turns the community layer into a roadbook: each traveler has a real SVG map, a profile that feels editorial instead of dashboard-y, and state pages that read like lived trips first and utility second.
Public profiles
01
Fresh stories
06
Centerpiece
SVG map
Traveler spotlights
Real routes, different rhythms.
Everyone gets the same map-first structure, but the page tone changes with the traveler — family loops, mountain runs, trade-road miles, and state stories worth opening.
Fresh from the road
Recent state stories.
A shared community rail that makes the profile network feel alive without breaking the map-first product story.
@jace-demo · Jace Demo
Nashville surprised me more than I expected
Good food, real energy, and way more than Broadway if you know where to look.
@jace-demo · Jace Demo
Texas feels bigger than the map can show
Long miles, big skies, and the kind of trip that resets your head.
@roadmom-jess · Jess Carter
Colorado finally gave us the mountain week we wanted
Cool air, better-than-expected family stops, and enough room to feel the trip shift gears.
@roadmom-jess · Jess Carter
New Mexico felt like color after a long gray stretch
A state that somehow feels warm, calm, and cinematic at the same time.
@dieselanddust · Marcus Hale
Montana reset my head in about twenty miles
Big sky is real, and the scale of the place makes every earlier hurry feel dumb.
@dieselanddust · Marcus Hale
Wyoming made the map feel honest again
Wind, distance, and a kind of quiet that makes you pay attention.