Jay posted in Area Appearance Feb 14, 2018 8:25:25 GMT
Green overgrowth, vines and bushes and crawl, cover the ruins of an old city, once abandoned hundreds of years prior. No life stirs, not even birds in the sky or insects over the plants. Husks of buildings spell out the history of what once was. Massive trees, taller than the tallest buildings in Broadripple, cover the sun, wrapping around the towers of the Lost City and dripping dank rainwater to the ground.
The trees claim the ruins into a massive forest. Unlike Maeko Forest, this cool-aired location is devoid of most undergrowth, clear except for the massive, skyscraper trees that stand straight and tall.
Exploring the lonely crevices of this place may prove fruitful and rewarding.
|
Jay posted in Area Appearance Feb 17, 2018 9:13:03 GMT
Close to the city's ruins, a short walk down the hills of coast will bring one to a cool, sandy beach. The beach overlooks a distant wreckage, continuation of the ruins buried deep into the ocean, too far to reach alone The beach itself is a good place to sit and relax, the sand soft and untouched. Watch out, though-- the water is cold!
|
Jay posted in Area Appearance Feb 14, 2018 8:33:22 GMT
Further along the coast, deeper past Bay, a beautiful, unreal sight opens up. A river cuts through a valley of ridges, shallow pools reflecting the sunlight in rainbows. In the distance, expressing physics impossible in Broadripple, islands and rock formations float along the horizon, fully suspended.
Caves and overhangs scale the coast, but it is not difficult to climb towards the mouth of the river.
|
Bunny posted in Area Appearance Feb 19, 2018 7:27:34 GMT
The caves are found in the opposite direction to the bay. They seem to go on forever into a dark abyss, and cave markings and weird symbols beg in whomever comes across them. Is it a mass tomb for whoever lived there? Perhaps a treasure awaits, or simply answers to the city above. Regardless, it silently beckons to be explored, and perhaps with some light and the right tools, it is possible.
The caves are named after the sound they make upon receiving the ocean winds, an eerie, longing whistle.
|