Player-owned port

The Player-owned port is a high-level members minigame that was released on 11 December 2012. This minigame involves players building their own port in order to manage a fleet of ships, staffed by recruited crew members. These ships explore the Wushanko Isles on the player's behalf and return with exotic items and supplies that are otherwise unavailable. Players can start by heading to Port Sarim. South-west of the Rusty Anchor pub is a portal that players can use to enter their port.

Level requirements
Access to your player-owned port has no requirements, but playing the minigame requires level 90+ in at least one of the following skills: Fishing, Slayer, Runecrafting, Herblore, Prayer, or Thieving. More content is unlocked for each of the requirements met. In addition to the skill requirements to play the minigame, levels 93 Cooking, 90 Smithing, 90 Crafting, 90 Runecrafting, or 85-95 Fletching are required to create the various reward items available. Level 85 Defence and Constitution are required to make use of the reward armour.

Meg, a Distraction and Diversion within the port, has no level requirement and thus is available to all members.

Tutorial
Starting the tutorial requires level 90+ in at least one of Fishing, Slayer, Runecrafting, Herblore, Prayer, or Thieving. Upon entering the port for the first time, players will see a cut-scene followed by a brief interactive tutorial. It is recommended to play through the tutorial, because it teaches the mechanics of hiring crew, equipping your ships, sending them out on voyages, upgrading your port, and collecting rewards. At the end of the tutorial the player receives a Captain's log, which can be used to check progress and status of many aspects of the minigame when not actually in port, and then proceeds to the actual minigame play proper.

How it works
Player-owned ports is a management-based minigame in which the player manages a port by sending out ships to complete voyages to the Wushanko Isles, also known as the Eastern Lands. Players choose crew members and ship upgrades for each voyage to overcome the voyage's Adversity. Each voyage will have Adversity in one or more of the following stats: Morale, Combat, and Seafaring. Next to each Adversity affecting the success of the chosen voyage, a green indicator bar shows the percentage of that Adversity that the player has overcome. Adversity is overcome by the stats provided by the captain, crew, and ship upgrades selected for that voyage. Those stats may be boosted by port upgrades that have been purchased. Effects earned from the port's random event minigames may be used to provide an additional one-time boost.

The green indicator bars on the voyage and shipyard interfaces indicate the chance of a successful outcome. The chance of a successful voyage is equal to the least filled indicator. Thus, if two indicators show 100% and one shows 56%, the chance of success is only 56%. If a mission is not successful, the ship may be damaged, the crew may be drained of energy or even lost overboard at sea, and resources will not be gained. When the chance of success is low, you are warned that harsher penalties will be incurred if the voyage fails.When the chance of success is high, it is possible to have a partial success and gain some resources even if the voyage fails.

The fourth stat, Speed, is different from the other three. Speed does not affect the success of a voyage, but affects the amount of time that it takes to complete a voyage.

Resources gained from voyages may be used to unlock ship upgrades, upgrade the port buildings, or hire more crew. Ship upgrades and a varied crew roster allow for more varied and more difficult voyages to be successfully completed. Port upgrades allow you to have more ships operating at a time, boost resources gained from successful voyages, boost ship stats, or improve you chances to attract special adventurers and higher quality captains or crew.

Voyages, crew for hire, and the Black Marketeer's resources all reset daily at the first login after 00:00 UTC. Unstarted special voyages cannot be carried over to the next day, but unstarted regular voyages can. Although unstarted special voyages cannot be carried over to the next day, a special voyage started on one day may be completed after reset, even if that voyage's adventurer is not in the port after reset.

Buildings
Buildings and decorations can be built or upgraded to offer bonuses to different areas of the port's operations.


 * Bar: Upgrading the Bar increases the chances of attracting adventurers and attracting better captains.
 * Office: Upgrading the Office unlocks additional ship slots.
 * Workshop: Upgrading the Workshop unlocks the ability to make reward items. The Hook must be unlocked before the Workshop can be upgraded. Upgrading the Workshop provides a bank chest in the port.
 * Lodgings: Upgrading the Lodgings increases the chances of attracting higher quality crew.
 * Shipwright: Upgrading the Shipwright boosts the base stats of your ships.
 * Warehouse: Upgrading the warehouse increases the rewards from voyages.
 * Totem Hotspots (4): Building a totem allows the player to choose a bonus, depending on which totem is built: extra chance of scroll missions; increased xp from missions; increased rewards from voyages; increased chances of a port random event; or increased trade-related goods received.
 * Icon Hotspots (3): Building an icon increases the chances that a specific adventurer will appear, depending on which icon is built. A player can build more than one of the same icon, although it is unknown if this will increase the chances any further.
 * Portal: Upgrading the portal is simply a cosmetic change.

Interfaces
The port interfaces can be seen at the top of the screen while at the port. Players can use the buttons to set up their voyages, upgrade buildings, check their resource stock, and see how far they've advanced with the map.

NPCs

 * John Strum, The Partner, is the former portmaster
 * Duncan, The Navigator, helps with the management of the port
 * Surula, The Barmaid, sells beer and "gossips" (gives a high level bonus voyage) every Thursday
 * Felix, The Black Marketeer, sells resources to the player for gold coins
 * Meg, The Adventurer, seeks the player's advice
 * Seasinger Umi, a siren training to become a seasinger

The Name


The player may customise each ship's name by bringing up an interface by clicking on the pencil icon next to that ship's icon. This can be done whether the ship is in port or at sea, and can be done for each ship slot regardless of whether it has been unlocked (viewable in Captain's Log). Each name has three parts that can be changed individually, either manually or randomly. The list of available names and the interface by which changes are made and applied are shown on their respective pages above.

Upgrades
Once unlocked, ships are already built for the player. Using resources, players can upgrade their ships using five customizable hotspots: Clicking on the hotspot gives players a list of possible upgrades. Each option shows its specific stats, its resource costs to buy, and either a grey or gold padlock if the upgrade has not been purchased, or a green check-mark if it has been purchased and is currently in use on that ship (purchased, currently unequipped upgrades will show neither padlock or checkmark). The stats displayed are coloured green if the upgrade would improve that stat from the current equipment, white if there would be no change in that stat, or red if it would cause a degradation in a particular stat.
 * Rams/Figureheads (bonus to Combat or Morale)
 * Deck Items 1 (bonus to Combat, Morale, or Seafaring)
 * Deck Items 2 (bonus to Combat, Morale, or Seafaring)
 * Rudders (bonus to Speed)
 * Hulls (bonuses to Combat, Morale, Seafaring, and Speed)

Once an upgrade is purchased, players can use them on any ship, even at the same time. Upgrades do not have to be purchased in the order displayed in the interface. If the player has the resources to purchase an upgrade, the padlock symbol will be gold. If the player has insufficient resources, then the padlock symbol will be grey. The upgrade options for the two deck hotspots are identical, and upgrades unlocked in one hotspot are automatically unlocked in the other.

Captain & Crew
A player may have a maximum of 5 captains and 25 crew members at any given time.

Your Crew
The crew roster shows your currently recruited units on the left and a recruiting interface on the right. You may get more information about individual captains or crew members by selecting them in the crew display. Information on the selected captain or crew member is shown below your crew display. If the unit is not on a voyage, it may be dismissed from the roster by clicking on the icon and then clicking on the red button in the bottom left corner.

Statistics
Each captain and crew member has statistics in Morale, Combat, Seafaring, and Speed. These are determined by four factors:

When a captain or crew member has been highlighted in the Crew Roster interface, if you hover your mouse over the Stat name (Morale, Combat, Seafaring, or Speed), you can see how much of the stat value is due to base value, level boost, personal bonus, or named traits.
 * The base stats of the particular type of unit, which are shown in the recruiting interface. The base stats alone determine the xp gain of the unit.
 * The level of the unit.
 * Any traits that the unit has.
 * Personal bonuses specific to an individual unit. These do not appear in the crew roster until the unit has been recruited.

Level
Each captain and crew member has a level, which starts at 0 and can be increased by sending them on voyages. It is unknown if there is a maximum level. When a captain or crew member gains a level, their stats are increased by 10% of their base stats. This level boost is not affected by previous level boosts, personal bonuses, or traits. Therefore, for example, a Smuggler always gains exactly 7 Seafaring per level, no matter what.

Traits
Captains and crew members may have between zero and four traits, which are permanent modifiers given in addition to the unit's base statistics. It is possible to have the same trait in multiple trait slots, thereby stacking the trait's effect if the effect is stackable.

Some crew member types start with specific inherent traits, such as the Merchant trait for the Ardougne Shopkeeper, or the Staunch trait for Golems. Only inherent traits are shown in the recruiting interface under the picture of the crew member prior to recruitment. Any other traits are only shown after recruitment.

Captains tend to have a much higher chance of having traits at recruitment than crew members. Some voyages list a trait for your captain as a reward. If completed successfully, the captain used to complete the voyage will gain the listed trait.

Effects of the traits can be seen when hovering over the trait. The possible traits are:

The effects appear to be processed by crew placement from left to right, which can be important for abilities that do not stack. For example if you have a First Mate and an Eastern Overseer on a single voyage (both with Solidarity), if the First Mate is to the left of the Eastern Overseer, his lower Solidarity bonus will be applied first and the Eastern Overseer's higher bonus will be ignored.

Captains
A ship must have a captain before it can go on a voyage. Until a captain has been assigned to a ship, crew cannot be assigned to it and previously assigned crew will not be shown. Each ship may only have one captain assigned to it.

Only one visiting captain is available for hire at a time. If the visiting captain is hired, the spot will remain vacant until reset at 00:00 UTC unless a captain reroll is used. Captain rerolls are available as rewards for completing the port random event minigames. At reset, or when rerolled, the visiting captain (if any) is replaced by a new randomly determined visiting captain, and the current visiting captain is lost.

Captains have base stats determined by their quality. Their base stats are the same for 3 stats while a fourth stat will have a higher stat, namely their speciality. The better the captain is, the more expensive they will be to hire. The starting captain is of the lowest quality. The first two tiers of captains are available from the start. Better captains are unlocked with each new region.

Some high-level bar upgrades increase your chance of attracting captains with particular specialities. Those bars start being unlocked with jade and cherrywood and include the Sinister Bar, which offers a 7% chance of attracting a combat or morale focussed captain and the Nautical Bar, which offers a 7% increased chance of attracting a Speed or Navigational focussed captain.

Personalities
In addition to their basic statistics and traits, each captain's personality is listed under their traits. These do not seem to affect game play, but they do affect the appearance and dialogue of the captain. The personalities are:
 * Abrasive
 * Approachable
 * Calm
 * Cruel
 * Eccentric
 * Exuberant
 * Vicious

Crew members
15 new crew are available for hire each day. Only 3 potential crew members are displayed at any one time, and the rest are held in reserve. When a player hires someone, they are removed from the list, and one of the reserve crew fills their place. If a player does not want to hire a crew member, they may click the green reroll button in the corner of the crew slot to immediately forfeit them and replace them with one of the crew held in reserve. The crew counter is reset at 00:00 UTC. Any crew left in the three slots will carry over to the next day, but the remainder are lost.

Up to 5 crew members may be assigned to a ship. Only crew members assigned to a ship have an effect on that ship's voyage.

Not all crew types are available to the player at the start of the minigame. Once the player accomplishes certain voyages, or unlocks certain areas, more (and often better) crew types will become available. For example, one of the first additional unlocks is the Cyclops, which is received when the Island of Cyclosis voyage is successfully completed.

The base statistics, costs, and other data for the crew types are listed in the table below.

For the single-stat crew members, the dominant colour of the icon can be used to tell what type of crew member they are; green is morale, red is combat, and blue is seafaring.

Voyages
After equipping and crewing a ship, players send it out into the Eastern seas to attempt to accomplish a voyage. The length of a voyage varies depending on the distance travelled, difficulty of the voyage, and the combined speed statistics of the ship and crew. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) for each ship on a voyage can be seen by clicking on the vessel while inside the port. With the proper setup, some voyages only take 15 minutes while others last hours.

Once a ship has returned, players receive a notification in their chatbox. Players must return to their port to check on the success of the voyage. Voyages can be successful or unsuccessful. Some successful voyages bring back resources such as Chimes, Bamboo, Black Slate, and Jade. Other voyages may bring back trade goods such as Ancient Bones, Spices, Chi, Plate, or Lacquer. Other successful voyages bring adventurers to the port, unlock new islands, or bring back parts of elusive scrolls for high level armour, food, or scrimshaws. A failed voyage may be a partial success with some of the reward still earned. However, partial success missions do not show any reward in the window and the player must check the value before and after a voyage to confirm if they got any of the reward. In addition, failed voyages may result in damage to the ship, loss of a crew member (including the Captain), or both. Equipping a ship with a Lifeboat increases the chance that a crew member lost overboard makes it back to Port.

Standard voyages
Players are given 15 new standard voyages each day. Only 3 voyages are displayed at any one time, and the rest are held in reserve. When a player sends a ship on a voyage it is removed from the list, and one of the reserve voyages fills its place. If a player does not want to attempt a voyage, they may click the green reroll button in the corner of the voyage slot to immediately forfeit it and replace it with one of the reserve voyages. The voyage counter is reset at 00:00 UTC. Any standard voyages left in the three voyage slots will carry over to the next day, but the remainder are lost. Be sure to manage your daily allotment of voyages otherwise you may end up with none until the voyage counter resets.

A Barmaid's Tip
Once on each Thursday, players may visit the port's bar and speak with the barmaid to hear some gossip about a standard voyage with increased rewards. This voyage will take the place of the third slot in the standard voyage interface. If there was a voyage already in that slot, it cannot be recovered, so it is suggested to free up the third slot before accepting the barmaid voyage. The voyage must be accepted on Thursday, and the mission received can be influenced by using the port management and selecting the appropriate region. The possible missions are as follows:

Players begin with only The Arc unlocked. Progress toward unlocking additional regions advances as your ships undertake voyages, logging more distance travelled. Distance is travelled and progress is made regardless of the success or failure of a voyage.

Each region unlocked is progressively farther away than the last. For example, to unlock the Skull region, a distance of 5,000 must be travelled; however, to unlock the Hook region, a distance of 40,000 must be travelled. The Captain's log, given by navigator Duncan, shows your total distance travelled on the Port statistics page.

As each additional region unlocked is farther from the port, their voyages have higher requirements for success and longer voyage times, but give better resources to reward success. Unlocking a region also unlocks new crew members from that region, with better base stats to help overcome the higher adversity.

Distance Traveled Formula
x = standard distance of region


 * Long voyage = x * 1.5 (+50%) - Voyage time is +50%


 * Standard voyage = x (+0%) - Voyage time is +0%


 * Easy voyage = x * 0.8 (-20%) - Voyage time is +0%


 * Very easy voyage = x * 0.7 (-30%) - Voyage time is +0%

E.g. The standard distance of The Hook is 1200, therefore, a long voyage would be 1200 * 1.5 = 1800 distance traveled for that particular long voyage.

NOTE: Each time a player unlocks a new region, the previous region will have its standard voyage distance halved. (The distance is only halved once and not halved for each subsequent region reached.)

The further the region is located to the east, the bigger the voyage distance will be in that region. Voyages in the Skull region have double voyage distance than voyages in The Arc, and so on.

If a players set focus on the region then they can get long, standard, easy and very easy missions from that region and standard missions from earlier regions. Adventure missions don't seem to be affected by what region player has chosen to focus on.

Random port events (Minigames)
When the player receives a random event, they will be alerted by a message in the chat box, immediately after a successful voyage. There will also be a yellow quest-looking icon that appears both above the appropriate person's head and on the minimap. Depending on which event is received, the player will have to go and talk to either Surula The Barmaid or Felix the Black Marketeer to start the event. Disconnecting or logging out during a Random port event will cause you to lose the event, but as long as you have not yet started the event, it will still be available the next time you log in. Additionally, if you get the notice of The Death Lotus assassin event but buy his daily goods first, you will also lose the event but Felix will continue to have the gold star above his head indicating that the mini-game event should still be there. (A bug report has been submitted for this error.)

When checking on multiple voyages, each has an independent chance of generating a random event, which means that it is possible to get both random events after checking 2+ voyage results. However, after completing either random event, the other random event will be erased. Thus, it is important to exit back into the Port after checking each voyage so as to eliminate the possibility to waste random events.

Each of these minigames gives minor rewards in the manner of "effects" (see below) which can be added to ship characteristics before a voyage.

Note: If the player has a Solomon's Store pet at the time that they are awarded the opportunity to play, they will be presented with the standard dialogues, but after clicking "Yes" in the confirmation dialogue asking if they want to play, nothing happens. Once the pet is "sent home" (via right-clicking on the pet), clicking the "Yes" button in the confirmation dialog will then take the player into the mini-game as normal. If the player has a regular pet following them, they will receive a message in chat stating that they cannot have a follower or summoning familiar while playing the mini-game. It is unknown yet if this is a bug/glitch or is intended behaviour. This applies for Surula's minigame, "Last Orders", and for the Felix the Black Marketeer's minigame, "A Simple Favor", as well.

Felix The Black Marketeer: A Simple Favour
Felix's random event presents the message: "The Black Marketeer had a little trouble with some assassins. Speak to him to relive the event." In this minigame, the player helps the Black Marketeer work off his debt to the Death Lotus Assassins. The player takes control of Felix and must find 5 ninjas hiding in various barrels around the dock, then locate and identify each ninja's victim.

Only one ninja and his or her victim can be searched for at a time. The player first searches for a ninja's barrel (these are easy to identify because the top is open so you can see the ninja hidden inside). If the player doesn't find a ninja within a set period of time, an arrow will appear pointing to one. Once the player has found a ninja, the ninja will give a clue hinting at who the intended victim is (one of the Wandering Strangers). The player, still controlling Felix, must then identify the correct victim; if the player guesses wrong, the ninja will give further clues to help the player narrow his search. Clues can specify what the target is wearing ("The target is wearing a hat"), colour or style of clothing ("No, the top is the wrong colour", "That's not my target, the top was a different style", or gender ("Well, that's not right. Completely the wrong gender for a start"). There are no penalties for misidentifying the victim, and no apparent time limits or limits on the number of guesses, so if desired, the player can ignore the clues and simply try all the wandering strangers.

Surula's Bar: Last Orders
Surula's random event presents the message: "The Barmaid had a tricky time while the Ship was away. Speak to her to relive the events." For this minigame, the player takes control of Surula and must serve beer to 20 clients in the bar area, upstairs, and nearby outside, all in fewer than 10 minutes. Surula can hold only 2 beer glasses at once and over the time she serves the clients, she will have to keep getting more from her bar in order to continue, as there are twenty clients to be served.

Note: Once you have served beer to a client, the "Serve Patron" option will no longer be available for that client.

Random event rewards

 * Effects: Most effects provide a one-time boost to a single ship, increasing one stat by 10% for a single voyage. These effects stack, e.g. you may use 2 Seasinger's Cry for +20% Seafaring. The Lifeboat, Lotus-Tint Spectacles, and Fortune of the Sea provide permanent boosts to a single ship. These effects do not stack, e.g. you cannot apply Lotus-Tint Spectacles twice to the same ship to gain a doubled XP bonus. However, you can apply all three of Lifeboat, Lotus-Tint Spectacles, and Fortune of the Sea to a single ship. Both one-time and permanent effects are applied before the voyage by clicking the "Add Effects" button when choosing a ship from the Voyage List interface, then selecting the Effect(s) to be applied to the selected ship.


 * Port resources
 * Captain rerolls instantly brings in a new visiting captain. Accessed from the Visitors drop-down menu. This replaces the currently available captain if there is one. Only two captain rerolls may be held at a time.
 * Crew reroll: Accessed from the Crew Roster interface. Adds 5 crew rerolls to your daily allowance.
 * Voyage rerolls add 5 voyages/rerolls to your daily allowance.
 * Visiting Adventurer rerolls will attract another visiting adventurer to the port, giving you some of their Special Voyages. This will be in addition to any other adventurers received on that day. Three Adventurer rerolls may be held at a time.

The stat boosts provided by one-time effects are applied based on your crew's total stat rather than to the stat required for a mission. For example, if your seafaring stat is 2000 and the voyage needs 2500, you will have an 80% chance of success. If you apply a +10% seafaring boost, your seafaring stat will increase from 2000 to 2200 (a 10% increase) which gives an 88% chance of success.

You can determine which permanent effects have been applied to a given ship by selecting that ship in the Voyage List interface (while the ship is in port) and clicking "Add Effect". Any effects which have been applied to that ship will be labelled "Active".

Note: The maximum number of any given reward that can be stored is 3. Originally, it was possible to increase the chance to get rarer or more valuable rewards simply by not using the more common or less useful rewards. This has been changed in a patch.

Strategies
In the Arc and Skull regions, focus on completing every voyage successfully. Because there are a limited amount of standard and special voyages per day, it's more important to complete the voyages that pose the least risk (highest success rate) with one ship, before attempting higher risk voyages once more upgrades are acquired or until crew members level up from easier voyages.

If you have no voyages left which you can get over 50-60% it may be better to send out expendable crew members than to reroll a voyage as even failed voyages (aside from story missions) will increase your travel distance, and progress you further to unlock new areas. However, be aware that any failed voyage, regardless of success rate, can result in loss of resources or crew members, or in your ship needing lengthy repairs. The Black Marketeer can fix your ship without you having to wait the required time but will charge (RuneScape) coins for the service.

To maximize the number of voyages each day, be sure to send out all Special Voyages and have no more than three standard voyages remaining when the port resets. Avoid rerolling voyages as this will take away from your total voyages for the day.

Increasing voyage success rate means using a balanced combination of crew member and ship upgrades. Voyages require 1 or more of the following stats: Morale, Seafaring, or Combat. Using crew members, ship upgrades, or items that affect those stats will increase the success rate.

The strongest skill of basic crew members can be identified easily by looking at the colour of their bandana: Crew members with red bandanas will specialize in combat; blue bandanas in seafaring; green bandanas in morale. Using a Brimhaven Pirate with only 150 Combat won't increase the success rate of a voyage which requires morale. However, if success rate is adequate, even without a full crew, it still may be beneficial to include additional crew members to fill the voyage. Any crew member that is part of a successful voyage gains experience and can level up, increasing their stats. Those bolstered stats can improve the success rate on future voyages, so it's useful to try to level up your crew members whenever possible. In order to maximize crew stats, it is best to train crew members with better base stats. For example, it is more effective to have a level 3 Catherby Fisherman with 200 seafaring than a level 3 Smuggler with 100.

Ship upgrades are also particularly important for the success of a voyage, especially because any upgrade unlocked can be used on any ship you own on all future voyages. Five upgrades can be applied to the ship, but of them the rudder does not affect the success rate. It is recommended to change what you have on your ship first to meet the mission requirements, then change your crew members.

Effects earned from random events, which can occur after checking the status of a returning voyage, can also bolster ship stats for one voyage.

Voyages to further portions of the east may take more time, but in time you'll be able to manage 3 or 4 ships to speed up the rate you complete your daily voyages. Rudder upgrades, captains that specialize in speed (at the cost of specializing in a main attribute) and some varieties of crewmen can also improve voyage speed.

One should decide about the voyages that are given. Arc voyages take 21 minutes (without speed boosts). Skull voyages take 1 hour extra, and Hook voyages take 2 hours extra. If one needs resources quickly, and have just hired new crew members (like replacing your whole crew with Pincer region crew members), they should level up quickly by doing Skull or Hook missions to level up before taking on any special, Bowl, Scythe or Pincer missions. This means you should have a 2 ships concentrating on the high level missions and a ship concentrating on the low/moderate level missions for some extra resources when the need arrives.

Resources may also be a factor in deciding which missions to take and which regions to explore. You will want a large amount of chimes, bamboo and slate to make your port up-to-date. Chimes are used for recruiting crew, upgrading your ship, and upgrading the warehouse, which will result in extra resources from a successful voyage. You will need a large amount of bamboo and slate to upgrade the office (which results in more voyages, thus meaning higher resource rate), bar (for a better captain), or workshop (to create the reward items: armour, scrimshaws, and rocktail soups).

After that you could focus on increasing your supply of resources. Resources can be needed if the ship's crew mutinies or the ship is damaged (either in combat or rough seas/rocks) as this results in a loss of some random resources for repairs. On the other hand, if no resources are available gold pieces can be used to repair a boat via the black marketeer instead, so you may prefer to concentrate on what you need for upgrading, rather than stockpiling resources to pay for possible repairs that may never be needed.

Rewards
Among the range of rewards available from player-owned ports are degradable level 85 armours: Tetsu armour, which is melee class; Death Lotus armour, which is ranged class; and Sea Singer's robes, which are magic class. These items can be created by players with 90 Smithing, Crafting, and Runecrafting respectively (non-assistable, unboostable, and the materials are untradeable). Players can create two versions of this armour: tradeable versions with slightly lower stats that crumble to dust when fully degraded, and untradeable versions with slightly higher stats that can be repaired either with coins or port resources. Other available rewards include the high level food rocktail soup, and scrimshaws, which are items for the new pocket slot. These rewards require the player's ships to retrieve 4 pieces of a scroll relating to each item for the player to be able to produce them. Once a scroll is completed, the parts for that scroll are removed from the possible finds for that player.

Titles
Titles are unlocked by increasing your Port Score, found in your captain's log. The titles are found under Descriptions in the Titles section of the Customization screen. In the Captain's Log, the First Mate title is referenced as First Officer. This is likely an error in the Captain's Log.
 * [Name] the Cabin Boy/Girl (1-399)
 * Bo'sun [Name] (400-799)
 * First Mate [Name] (800-1199)
 * Cap'n [Name] (1200-1599)
 * Commodore [Name] (1600-1999)
 * Admiral [Name] (2000-2400)

Increasing Port Score

 * Every 5k Distance traveled +1 score
 * Scroll pieces found +3 score
 * Upgrading Ship Part +5 score
 * Upgrading Port +10 score
 * Story missions done +20 score
 * Adventurers met +50 score

Tetsu armour
Tetsu helm (Superior)

Tetsu laminar (Superior)

Tetsu legplates (Superior)

Sea singer's robes
Sea singer's headband (Superior)

Sea singer's robe top (Superior)

Sea singer's robe bottom (Superior)

Death lotus armour
Death lotus hood (Superior)

Death lotus chestplate (Superior)

Death lotus chaps (Superior)

Recipe Scrolls
Rocktail soup heals a maximum of 2100 life points (with a Constitution level of at least 95) and can boost your life points by an extra 10%. This makes it the highest healing food in the game. It is made from spices and rocktail, requires a Cooking level of 93 to make it at the port workshop, and gives 525 cooking experience. It is tradeable.
 * [[File:Rocktail soup.png]] Rocktail soup
 * [[File:Shark soup.png]] Shark soup (unreleased)

While Shark soup is present on the item list of the Grand Exchange, and despite the fact that it was introduced in the same update, it is currently unable to be cooked at any known location in RuneScape - the stoves in the Workshop constructed within the port only offer the ability to prepare Rocktail soup. There are several hints present that would seem to indicate that Shark soup is merely a remnant of previous development stages and is not intended to be available at this time: unlike all the rest of the new craftable items, it can not be created as of yet; the Shark soup heals fewer life points than its presumed ingredient, a Shark; and finally, its starting price on the Grand Exchange was only 1 coin as opposed to Rocktail soup, which appeared first with a value of 5000 coins. Therefore, it is assumed that should Shark soup ever be properly released, its properties will be at least somewhat reworked.

Trade Goods
These trade goods are components for completing or assembling the items described in the scrolls, much as Herblore uses components in potions. The player's current supply of these items is shown under the "Resources" drop down menu at the top of the screen while in port.
 * Ancient bones - used for creation of Scrimshaws
 * Plate - used for creation of Tetsu armour.
 * Spices - used for creation of Rocktail soup and (presumably) Shark soup.
 * Lacquer - used for creation of Death lotus armour.
 * Chi - used for creation of Sea singer's robes.

Experience
When a player receives a special voyage with the reward of experience listed, the player will receive experience in the skill associated with whichever adventurer is connected to that voyage.
 * The Missionary - Prayer
 * The Convict - Thieving
 * The Biologist - Herblore
 * The Assassin - Slayer
 * The Whaler - Fishing
 * The Occultist - Runecrafting

Ship Updates
Whilst on a voyage, you may occasionally receive random updates about your ship, which do not impact on your ships voyage in any way. These include random observations, notices, etc.

Music Unlocked

 * Sea Folk - When you enter the port for the first time.
 * Sea Hear - When you enter the port for the first time.
 * Sea You Late Oar - When you enter the port for the first time.
 * Shanty Instrumental - When you enter the port for the first time.
 * Stick Your Oar In - When you enter the port for the first time.
 * Stick Your Ale In - Walk north from the portal entrance and go near the bar.

Trivia
Trivia for the ship update messages is shown on the ship updates page.
 * The bag of winds is named after the bag given by Aeolus, the god of wind, to Odyssues in The Odyssey.
 * The Chinese word in the top left of the Archipelago map is "端口" (duānkǒu) which is the wrong translation of port. Duānkǒu refers to a computer port or interface. The correct translation should be "港口" (gǎngkǒu), though  Jagex could have intended to use the word as a pun.
 * The Chinese word in the bottom left of the Archipelago map is "指南針" (zhǐnánzhēn), meaning compass.
 * When attempting to drop an item at the port, players receive an in-game message saying "The Port Sarim Private Docks Authority thanks you for not littering."
 * When attempting to burn logs at the port, players receive an in-game message saying: "Port Sarim safety regulations forbid the dumping, abandoning or burning of flammable materials on the dockside."
 * If you attempt to setup a cannon in the port, you will receive the message: "Cannons belong on ships, not the dockside."
 * "The islands: "Isle of Juniper", "The Islands That Reflect the Moon", "Haranu" and "Tokoko" resemble the country of New Zealand, twice, one sideways and the other upside down. Many of the islands also resemble the Hawaiian islands.
 * Sailor's flavour text may read "Gives love a bad name" which could be a reference to the song "You Give Love a Bad Name" by the band Bon Jovi, an 80's and 90's American classic rock band.
 * Sailor's flavour text may read "Seventh child of a seventh child." This may be a reference to the folk belief, around since the Middle Ages, that the seventh son of a seventh son is born with tremendous magical and/or healing powers.
 * Sailor's flavour text may read "Is the reason the rum is gone." This is a reference to the hit movie Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl in which Jack Sparrow says "But why is the rum gone?".
 * Shuma the whale, the subject of The Whaler's pursuits, is a reference to the famous orca Shamu, whose name is used as the title of the SeaWorld orca shows.
 * Some voyages have a requirement of 9001, a reference to the Dragon Ball Z meme.