Forums in 'Great Bear Wilderness'
Deepwood Weald: Tree upon spindly tree line the entirety of this forest. They are tall, lanky things that stretch high into the sky where their branches tangle together. Save for the few infantile trees, none of their branches are within reach to the forest creatures that crawl within this deep wood. Light cuts through their limbs at a peculiar angle, casting this place in an eerie white, foggy sort of hue that makes it difficult to see in any one direction. As far as following footprints? Most are lost beneath the red and green ferns which line the floor. This wood is a large repetitive stretch with few distinguishable markings. It’s difficult to navigate and easy to get lost in the weald.
97
A bar song (tipsy).
9 hours ago
by Dutch
Redhawk Caldera: South and west of the current map, a sprawling grassland stretches for miles before leading to the base of this extinct volcano. Its slopes are thick with greenery and lead up to an uneven ridge line. Instead of a peak, the mountain top features a sunken lake, its surface remarkably smooth. The southern rim of the crater is comprised of particularly tall, jagged crags; they are the misplaced peak, broken into pieces and blown aside during the volcano's final eruption. The terrain is beautiful but rugged. On the surface, it may not appear to be a very homey place, yet the caldera harbors many secrets below the surface.
198
goldpearl
9 hours ago
by Crane
Ouroboros Spine: Rising on their own in the southern Great Bear Wilderness, an unbroken ring of short, squat mountains guards a once rolling valley. An ancient, 2-story temperate conifer forest once cloaked the entire region, but now the bowl is a mud pit more than anything, and its interior lake, once a quarter of the size, has swelled to over half the size of the valley within. Some of the deeply rooted trees have remained standing, but the ground is far too wet and slippery to safely travel on and much of the forest has fallen.
490
Aliuk-aimagvik
8 hours ago
by Dutch
Moonspear: The Moonspear, the tallest mountain in its range, rivals its brother, the Sunspire, in height and majesty. The wildlife that makes the mountain its home find shelter upon the Spear's lower slopes, which are covered thickly in a dark, tangled woods. Those that make their way up the mountain's crooked, jagged passages are rewarded with the stunning views the Moonspear has to offer on its northern face where a series of flat ridges and plains make the perfect perches for a romantic night of stargazing. The eastern face is pockmarked with shallow craters, remnants of a meteor impact, that are bursting with new growth.
127
on the front line, get re...
May 21, 2024, 12:08 PM
by Sialuk
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