Where Golden Age Grandeur Floats on Water
They built a city where no city should exist — on waterlogged peat, held up by wooden piles driven into the sand below. And yet Amsterdam became the richest city on Earth.
In its Golden Age, Dutch merchants controlled half the world's trade. They dug canals in concentric rings, lined them with mansions, and filled their homes with art by Rembrandt and Vermeer. They welcomed refugees, freethinkers, and philosophers when the rest of Europe burned them at the stake.
Your mission: walk these canal-laced streets, solve 10 riddles, and uncover 800 years of secrets hiding in plain sight.
"I am an Amsterdammer" — the city that turned tolerance into its greatest monument