It doesn't take someone adept in the art of soil sampling and fertilizer creation to make a compost pile and spread it out somewhere. This even happens naturally with no human input. Compost doesn't generate pollution, but it's still a dead block of sorts that can't grow things and can clutter storage.
What if there were a recipe that combined the major components of soil (sand, clay, biological matter) at a certain ratio to convert it into dirt?
It could be done at a worktable, or whatever station fertilizers use.
It doesn't take someone adept in the art of soil sampling and fertilizer creation to make a compost pile and spread it out somewhere. This even happens naturally with no human input. Compost doesn't generate pollution, but it's still a dead block of sorts that can't grow things and can clutter storage. What if there were a recipe that combined the major components of soil (sand, clay, biological matter) at a certain ratio to convert it into dirt? It could be done at a worktable, or whatever station fertilizers use.