Magma is just getting started.
From the core of creation, Magma emerges — raw, unyielding, alive. It doesn’t follow trends, it forges them. This is the spark before the eruption.

🔥 Presale Begins
Be ready for the eruption — Magma ignites on November 3th, 2025.
Supervolcanoes
Deep beneath the crust, ancient magma chambers awaken — vast enough to change the face of continents when they erupt.
Mauna Loa — The Giant of Hawaii
Mauna Loa is the largest volcano on Earth, rising over 9 km from the ocean floor. Its massive shield shape covers half of Hawaii’s Big Island, and its eruptions are slow, steady, and awe-inspiring — a sleeping titan of fire.
Mount Kilimanjaro — The Sleeping King of Africa
Kilimanjaro stands proudly above the African plains at 5,895 m. This dormant stratovolcano hides three volcanic cones beneath its icy crown, a breathtaking reminder of the continent’s fiery origins.
Yellowstone — The Sleeping Titan of America
Hidden beneath the forests and geysers of Wyoming lies one of Earth’s most powerful supervolcanoes. The Yellowstone Caldera spans over 70 kilometers, its vast magma chamber breathing heat into the land above. Though dormant for thousands of years, its geysers and hot springs are constant reminders that immense pressure still stirs below — a sleeping titan, shaping the continent from beneath.
Campi Flegrei — The Fire Fields Beneath Naples
The Phlegraean Fields simmer quietly under southern Italy — a vast supervolcanic caldera stretching beneath Naples. Steam vents, earthquakes, and bubbling craters mark the surface of one of the most dangerous volcanic systems on Earth.
Volcanoes: Earth’s Fiery Heartbeat
Beneath the crust, molten rivers surge and pressure builds — each eruption a raw expression of the planet’s living power.
Mount Vesuvius — Italy
The infamous Vesuvius looms over Naples — silent yet restless. Its last major eruption in 1944 was a reminder of its deadly history, and its magma chambers remain under constant watch.
Mount Etna — Sicily, Italy
Europe’s most active volcano, Etna, towers above Sicily with near-constant rumblings and glowing lava flows. It has shaped the island for millennia — both a threat and a source of life.
Mount Fuji — Japan
Japan’s iconic Mount Fuji last erupted in 1707, covering Tokyo in ash. Dormant yet majestic, it remains a symbol of harmony between calm and power.
Sakurajima — Kyushu, Japan
Sakurajima erupts frequently with ash plumes and lava fountains — a constant reminder of the fiery core beneath Japan’s southern islands.
Krakatoa / Anak Krakatau — Indonesia
The 1883 Krakatoa eruption reshaped the region and darkened global skies. Its “child,” Anak Krakatau, still rises from the sea — destruction reborn in fire.
Mount Merapi — Java, Indonesia
Merapi, “The Mountain of Fire,” is among the most dangerous volcanoes on Earth, threatening nearby villages with frequent explosive eruptions.
Mount Tambora — Sumbawa, Indonesia
Tambora’s colossal 1815 eruption caused the “Year Without a Summer,” altering climate and history. Its vast caldera is a monument to planetary power.
Kīlauea — Hawaii, USA
Kīlauea’s near-constant eruptions reshape Hawaii’s Big Island — new land born from molten fire and sea.
Eyjafjallajökull — Iceland
In 2010, Eyjafjallajökull’s ash clouds grounded flights worldwide — proof of how even remote volcanoes can shake global systems.
Hekla — Iceland
Called “The Gateway to Hell” in the Middle Ages, Hekla has erupted more than 20 times and is now considered overdue — a sleeping giant beneath the ice.
Popocatépetl — Mexico
Popocatépetl, the “Smoking Mountain,” lies dangerously close to Mexico City, sending frequent ash plumes high into the sky.
Nevado del Ruiz — Colombia
The 1985 eruption unleashed deadly lahars that buried the town of Armero. Today it stands as both warning and research site for volcanic hazards.