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Niðavellir

Dark Fields

Geography

Situated deep below the surface of the Realm of the Dead, it’s an endless expanse of dark caves and caverns. Nidavellir is filled with giant, open caves interconnected with caverns and shafts.

Biomes

Dark Fields

A fairly flat biome covered in moss. Ballcap mushrooms naturally appear in this biome, although they can also be found within other biomes, and can form large patches of fungal growth. With adition of farm animals such as the glowing giant salamander this biome is fit for large scale farming. Salamander’s rattle fungus is native to these lands and can be found in isolated pockets. These mushrooms are helpful with cultivating crops.

Dark Hills

An uneven terrain of small hills. It contains largely the same composition of lifeforms as Dark Fields.

Fungal Swamp

A mix of flat land and pools of water.

Bright Forest

Forest composed mostly of colossal umbrella mushrooms which create a almost solid roof made from the mushrooms’ caps. Gills found beneath the mushrooms’ caps light up the forest’s floor making it a hotspot for all kind of lifeforms. 

Giant Forest

A purple forest of giant bells.

Black Forest

A dense forested biome comprised mostly of the tall melting scales mushrooms, but gaint bells can also commonly be found. The biome can be dangerous to travelers due to decaying melting scales mushrooms which can suffocate those unfrotunate enough.

Blind Lake

A dimly lit biome found in deeper parts of Niðavellir. It is lit by larval form of Spiritlights which produce a faint, blue light at the end of their threads. The biome is characterised not only by the lack of light, but also with cold lakes in which blind dragon larva lives.

Dragon's Lair

Biome made by adult blind dragons, it’s circular cave with scattered bones. This biome is a home to blind dragons, and because of that it is ill-advised to go near one. Dwarven funeral homes do not provide funerary services to those lost within a Dragon’s Lair.

Ecosystem

With little to no light coming down from the surface, there is little floral life, but in its place are diverse species of fungus. Many species of these fungus developed bioluminescence to herd animals close to them so then they could gather nutrients either from their waste or corpses. Mushrooms aren’t the only species to glow, there are also species of insects, amphibians and some mammals which can glow. These creatures either via bioluminescence or biofluorescence which is mostly the case in larger classes like Amphibia and Mammalia, whilst consuming bioluminescent bacteria is mostly seen in class Insecta. Most creatures gather around bioluminescent fungi, but there are species which prefer darkness like some mole species. The abundance of fungi and amphibian species is due to the dampness of the caves which are optimal conditions for these type of creatures. The human-like primates of the species Homo sapiens pumilus arose in these confined environments.

Localised Phenomena

The Realm sometimes experiences local cave ins and global earthquakes which can also be felt on the surface.

Climate

Nidavellir is overall a cold and moist Realm devoid of typical weather condition found on surface except for the rain coming down from the surface from the few holes in ceilings of caves. Temperature is a warmer than surface temperature due to warm air being pushed through the caves from the deeper lava springs and ranges from mean temperature in January being 4 °C to 12 °C in July. Relative humidity hovers around 90%, but rises when it there’s a snow storm in Niflheim and rises to such levels that the water starts rapidly condensing into a sort of rain phenomena.

Fauna, Flora & Fungus

Fauna

Dwarf

(Homo sapiens pumilus) is the only primate species found in Nidavellir. It is the most intelligent and widespread species within the Realm. It bears many similarities with its genetic cousin Homo sapiens sapiens (humans) with their humanoid shape, face features, organs, opposable thumbs and large brains, but it differs by being shorter and more stockily built with more pronounced facial bones. The dwarf subspecies also differs from their cousins by having less sexual dimorphism with females of the subspecies being more often able to grow facial hairs than in the human subspecies. Their height is around 147 cm.

Spatail

(Ornithorhynchus adipemi) is a species of platypuses (O. anatinus) found in Niðavellir. Their name is dderived from the words “spatula” and “tail” which were used to describe their unusual tail. It is much larger than its Midgard counterpart on average reaching 240 cm in height and 6 m in length (not counting the tail). The animal is usually found in the wild around bodies of water like rivers and swamps, but can also be found on plains. Its body is very similar to those of Midgard platypuses, even glowing via biofluorescence, but they have patterns over their bodies which via bioluminescence glow in yellow, blue, purple and green light depending on their envirnonment. Spatails gain their bioluminescence from fish found in waters they inhabit. They are naturally friendly towards human species because they are not seen as threats. Similarly to platypuses, spatails lactate and are thusly very useful to dwarves. The dwarves create bonds with these creatures which often last a lifetime since spatails similarly live around 180 years. They are used for their milk and for transport on land or on water.

Rock Chucker

(Mellivora saxiveru) or rock badger is a mammalian species closely related to honey badgers (M. capensis). They’re on average 2 meters in length. Rock chuckers have larger front legs and a large head. Body is coloured mostly white with a stone-gray, wide stripe on their backs going the entire length of their body making the upper side gray. Along this stripe appear stone protrusions mostly concentrated around their nech and upper back. Unlike Midgard’s honey badgers, rock badgers have an inherited ability to wield Elemental Magic, to be more specific, Terrestrial Magic. The badgers aren’t inherently aggressive towards humans, but approaching them is unadvised, especially whilst on a mount.

Uncommon mole

(Scalopus terrestris) is a species of mole. It is found in deeper caves of Niðavellir and Black Forests. The uncommon mole has silver-gray fur, pointed nose, short tail and broad, shovel-like front paws it uses for digging. Avarage height of this mole is quite large around 4 meters. Unlike Midgard moles, uncommon moles aren’t omnivores, but fungivores. Theorised reason why these moles still retain their heightened senses is to avoid the much larger blind dragons (Proteus candeguilla). These animals have been partially domesticated and allow human species to ride them. This can be very useful because of their heightened senses which can detect nearby blind dragons.

Greater fox-like bat

(Astridopteryx microtis) is a species of bat commonly found in large caverns of Nidavellir. It has medium long, black to light brown or gray fur with their nose, ears and legs lacking this fur. Their snout is what gives them the name since it resembles the nose of a fox. Inside of their ears glows in a blue light which is gained via bioluminescence which it gains from eating large bioluminescent insects (example: Lampyridae animalux) which are attracted to the light from its ears.

Inkbird

(Steatornis blorvirkiensis) is a species of cave birds closely related to oilbirds (S. caripensis). Inkbirds have a similar appearance to their relatives with long bodies, large wings, small legs and a flattened, hooked beak. They are gray to dark-gray in colour with biofluorescent, white spots. Avarage height is 1.5 m. These birds are fungivores and mostly feed on the inky liquid of decaying melting scales mushrooms (Coprinus liquesquamae). They mostly nest on top of large mushrooms but can often be found nesting in smaller cave openings.

Climbing dog

(Agalychnis lentumicus) is a species of frog commonly found in forrested areas. It is 105-160 cm long and 80-85 cm high. They have distinctly long legs with suction cups and a large head with big, bulbous, yellow or orange eyes. Top of their body is purple or light blue and the bellies are cream with a yellow or orange and blue or purple coloured stripe dividing the top and bottom. Their appearance might not show it, but climbing dogs are apex predators. They hunt in small packs, hiding on the stalks of large fungi and ambushing their prey, but sometimes resort to running after and exhausting their pray. Within their mouths is a set of “teeth” on both lower und upper jaw. These “teeth” are not real teeth because they are not made of enamel, but are in actuality sharp bone growths coming straight from their jaws. Climbing dogs are a social animal and they often form mutually beneficial relationships with dwarves and other human species.

Waterbender

(Cryptobranchus aquadens) is a species of mostly aquatic salamander and a relative of hellbenders (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis). Typical length is 2.1–2.3 meters. They’re green to turquoise in colour which helps them camouflage beneath the surface of marshy water. In response to blue wavelengths of light their skins glow light blue via biofluorescence. Like hellbenders, these salamanders have a large, horizontally flat tails and gills, but unlike hellbenders, waterbenders can easily breathe on land. Waterbender’s hunting strategy is similar to those of crocodiles, waiting in shallow water with their eyes poking above the surface and waiting for prey to come close enough to grab. Waterbenders can also use simple Elemental magic, more specifically, Water Magic which they use mostly when hunting to aid in their grabs or to concuss their prey. This species is native to waters of Fungal Swamps.

Glowing giant salamander

(Andrias candentis) is a species of giant salamander characterised by its biofluorescence and size. It fluoresce green in response to blue (440-460 nm) and ultra-violet excitation light (360-380 nm). The average specimen weighs 25-30 kg and is 115 cm in length, but it can reach up to 50 kg and 180 cm in length.

Cave fox

(Salamandra lanzai magnupuer) is a sub-species of lanza’s salamanders (S. lanzai). Their name is derived from their orange colouring and their calls which sound similar to a fox. They are around 90 cm long without the tail. Under purple and ultraviolet light they glow via biofluorescence a purplish colour which helps them blend in under Giant Bells. Prey consists of small vertebrates like plains chicken (Breviceps nopullum), but they also eat different fungal species.

Plains chicken

(Breviceps nopullum) is a species of frog, unlike what the name implies. The frog’s average size is around 50 cm in height. It is found in temperate forests and mosslands. There’s a domesticated sub-species B. nopullum domi which is farmed for it’s meat and frogspawn. It is a staple in nidvel cuisine and it’s taste is described by Midgardians as chickeny.

Cave caecilian

(Siphonops annulatus clarannulos) is a sub-species of ringed caecilians (S. annulatus). It’s on avarage 1 m long which is more than double the size of a ringed caecilian. The body is cylindrical and bluish-black in colour. The annular grooves that completely encircle the body glow via bioluminescence in shades of white and green depending on the region. They feed on mycelium and smaller fungi found along the ground. They make shallow burrows around 50 cm in depth.

Blind dragon

(Proteus candeguilla) also known as blind man is a species of salamander found in cave walls. The larva of the salamander lives mostly in complete darkness within underground ponds because of which it has underdeveloped eyes which can only see faint blobs of green light and no pigmentation making it have a sort of fleshy, pink colour. It is due to this it is often called the blind man. This faint glow is important for identifying other members of the species. It hunts using electroreceptors and hearing to find its prey. The larva eventually overgrows its pond and develops gray scales, receptors sensitive to vibrations and grows more fingers (from 3 to 6) with claws on its forelimbs. The now adolescent blind dragon burrows into the ground or walls of a cave from which it hunts whatever prey it finds using its keen sense of smell and vibrations. The adults can reach up to 30 m in length.

Niðavellir squarred tortoise

(Centrochelys sulcata cochleapidum) also called snails bane tortoise is a subs-species of african squarred tortoise (C. sulcata). They have a straight carapace length of around 89,0 cm in males. Females have a straight carapace length of about 58,8 cm. Both body and the shell are grayish-purple in colour with the carapace having a yellowish glowing pattern which highlight scutes. Niðavellir squarred tortoise is a carnivore hunting almost exclusively hunting cone hares (Achatina testacandensis).

Werewolf spider

(Adelocosa socet) is a species of wolf spiders. They typically measure between 1.87 – 3 meters in height. Werewolf spiders lack eyes, have a black carapace and legs and a grey abdomen. The spider hunts by making a large web across two melting scales mushrooms (Coprinus liquesquamae) near the ground and waiting for prey to get tangled in it, usually an inkbird (Steatornis blorvirkiensis).

Broodmother

is a mother of a giant spider nest. Broodmothers are known in two giant tarantula species: common spider (Gigaranea fortimorsu) and blue poison spider (Gigaranea venenamorsu) both of which can be found within other realms. Broodmothers of common spiders are 4 meters tall, and those of blue poison spiders are half that at around 2 meters tall. They’re carnivores and eat anything they can, usually rock chuckers (Mellivora saxiveru), inkbirds (Steatornis blorvirkiensis), werewolf (Adelocosa socet) spiders and dwarfs (Homo sapiens pumilus). 

Goliath millipede

(Motyxia longantennae) is a species of millipedes in the genus of cyanide-producing millipedes. They can reach to 4 meters in length.  Goliath millipedes have 21 blue segments which glow in green making the body appear parakeet. They are piscivores and hunt fish by dangling their glowing antenna in the water and waiting for a fish to bite, after which they lunge forward and wait for them to stop moving. Although they mostly hunt fish, the goliath millipedes also hunt cave caecillians (Siphonops annulatus clarannulos) with a similar method.

Walking tower

(Ambulaturrim gigas) also commonly known as walking keep is a relative of bald face hornets (Dolichovespula maculata). This wasp species is very unique in regards to their nests. The nest queen is 3 meters long and has a 6 meter high nest built on top of her. They’re black with bioluminescent, white patterns. The species in omnivorous and eats most species found in Black Forests.

Rigeteras

(Pselliodidae monstrumalba) is a species of centipedes. Unlike their tiny relatives, rigeteras is giant reaching on average around 3 meters in lenght. They have 15 pairs of long legs and large mandibles which inject a powerful toxin. Their usual prey are cave caecilians (Siphonops annulatus clarannulos) which can usually escape them due to their slipperiness, but rigeteras’ venom kills the victim within a minute. Rigeteras and cave caecilians are in a constant “arms race” with cave caecilians developing venom resistance and rigeteras stonger venom.

Beowulf beetle

(Dynastes beowulf) is a species of rhinoceros beetle. The adult body size is between 2 and 2,3 m in length without the thoracic horn. This species is highly sexually dimorphic with only females possessing the giant horns they are known for which they use for combat to win possession and mating rights to a male. In these fights, the females attempt to grab their rival to throw them. The reason for this behaviour is the male’s tight mating window with them only being able to mate for around 2 months. Beowulf beetle larvae resides within stalks of large fungus and grows for around 2 years in which it goes through 3 metamorphosis stages. Adults feed on glowing gills of giant fungus are attracted to 390-510 nm wavelengths of light.

Giant weevil

(Curculionidae magnuventer) is a species of giant weevils found in Niðavellir. Their average height is around 97 cm. Giant weevil’s appearance is similar to other weevils within their family with a round body, big eyes and long mouth. They are brownish in colour with bioluminescent, green stripes they use to indentify each other. Giant weevils are native to Giant Forests. They feed on the giant bell’s stalk and create small, circular holes within them. Dwarves have domesticated some of them and are a common farm animal.

Bog hawk

(Tetracanthagyna cornumagnum) is a species of dragonfly found in Fungal Swamps. They can grow up to 1 meter long. Bog hawks are carnivores and hunt fish and buckler crabs.

Red cap beetle

(Labidomera fungucomedentis) is a species of cap beetle. It is round, 30-33 cm long with a black head and pronotum and bright red elytra with variable mottled black patches. The beetle feed on caps and gills of living and decaying giant bells (Psilocybe ogivalagigas).

Spiritlight

(Lampyridae animalux) is a species of bioluminescent beetle. It produces blue light from its abdomen to attract the opposite sex of the species. The insect lays its eggs on the ceilings of caves and caverns. When the larvae hatch they make a thin, silk thread with the end covered in sticky fluid. This line is dangled below the larve and the larve emits a blue light which is refracted through the glassy thread. Most of the light is refracted and emitted in the sticky end of a thread which attracts smaller prey which sticks to the fluid and is pulled upward into the larva’s mouth.

Buckler crab

(Tachypleus aquadulbranchiae) is a species of horseshoe crabs native to Niðavellir’s Fungal Swamps. Females of this species grow to 66.5 cm in length, including the tail and males 54 cm in length. Their cephalothorax and abdomen are pear green and their telson is bioluminescent and glows a light blue colour. Buckler crabs are omnivores and feed on molluscs, worms, other benthic invertebrates and algae. They are useful to human species for their blood which is made into regeneration potions.

Cone hare

(Achatina testacandensis) is a species large air-breathing land snails. They’re typically 60 – 75 cm long. Body of the snail is stone-gray and its curvy shell is toned-down purple with yellow dots and lines that glow via bioluminescence. They’re found within Giant Forests where they feast on plos and other low laying fungus along occasional bug or other slugs for calcium. They’re considered pests and are often hunted and eaten by local dwarf populations.

Hooked net

(Labidiaster fortiviverra) is a species of starfish from the family Heliasteridae. It can reach 7.5 meters in diameter and has 40 to 45 long narrow rays. It is a brownish-gray colour making it hard to distinguishe from the sediment and rocks. Hooked net hunts by perching on a raised surface like a rock and extending most of its rays and moving them in search of prey. When something brushes up agianst one of their rays it snaches it with its rays covered in hooks and drags it towards its mouth which doesn’t always have to be bigger than the prey.

Grazer star

(Culcita herbascentis) is a species of terrestrial seastars found in Fungal Swamps. The star is 1 – 2 meters in diameter and is a grayish colour with bright red, glowing spots. It almost exclusively feeds on capped bristles (Cooksonia tubadensis) and plos (Mollis stratum).

Colossus

is a stemland creature made of strong fungal material. It is around 2,9 meters in height and its body is humanoid. It has a much larger and stronger body than any human species, wide shoulders and a head situated in the upper part of its chest. It possesses limited use of Wild Magic and uses it in tandem with physical attacks. It is found in every stemland biome in Niðavellir.

Infected

is a dead member of a human species (Homo sapiens) infected by a giant fungus’ mycelium. Thier height is dependent on the infected sub-species, adding no aditional height to the deceased. This is not true for more extreme variations of these creatures. For example the variations called Infected Brute are large amolgamations of several bodies and have elongated limbs. Although the hosts body is dead, it is artificially kept “alive” and as such requires sustenance which is usally human flesh, but can on occasion be of other sorts. This fungal disease is not transmittable to live specimens, only those already deceased. The Infected are a relatively new phenomena, appearing around the same time as other undead creatures found in other realms.

Lost

is a mostly unknown creature. They are souls of travelers which died without getting buried, thus making them unable to move on. Lost have been spotted in smaller, dark and largely uncharted caves and in Blind Lakes.

Twisted

are creatures appearing as contorted humanoids. They reside in abandoned dwelligns. It was reported by several witnesses which were once residences of these locations that some Twisted resemble people they knew and that once lived there.

Fungus

Melting scales mushroom

(Coprinus liquesquamae) is the largest fungus found in Yggdrasill. Adults reach typical heights from 20 to 100 m. When cut or depositing spores, the mushroom will turn into a dark blue or black liquid filled with spores which can be used as an ink substitute after being boiling it to sterilise the spores. It doesn’t produce much light, but it still uses black bioluminescence, which is made by producing white light and having different intensities of this light, to attract animals, more specifically giant insects and bats which stick to the mushroom and are slowly digested. The mushroom is lanky with a giant black to gray, bell-shaped cap which has a flaky, scale like texture on top ergo the common name.

Colossal umbrella mushroom

(Macrolepiota perampabella) is a species of edible, bioluminescent fungus. When mature the fungus can reach to heights of 18-35 m and its stem is similar in properties to the wood of an oak tree and is often used by dwarves for the same purposes. Immature mushrooms are edible and prepared similarly to a cutlet. The gills of colossal umbrella is bioluminescent and mature specimens can light up a giant area which attracts many species of animals which provide biomatter that contains important nutrients for the fungi. They are found solitary or in fairy rings.

Giant bell

(Psilocybe ogivalagigas) is a species of psychedelic, bioluminescent fungus. Mature specimens can grow to between 18 to 35 m in height and their colour shifts from dark purplish-blue to dark purple. It has a long, thin stalk and a comparatively small, bell-shaped cap. The mushroom emits purple light from its gills, part of stalk and stripes on its cap. It uses its bioluminescence to attract animals who’s waste it uses as fertilizer.

Spire fungus

(Prototaxites dumradices) is a species of prevously thought extinct, prehistoric family of fungus Prototaxitaceae. Unlike most giant fungi found in Niðavellir, spire fungus doesn’t have a cap. Spire fungus has a large mycelium network which can poke out into nearby water and a 8.8 – 18 m tall, green stem. This fungus species can be found in Fungal Swamps.

Salamander's rattle fungus

(Cordyceps crepundia) is a parasitic fungus which is toxic when eaten to human species. The fungus grows into 13 to 30 cm high, rattle-shaped and gray bodies. The surface of the stroma is porous revealing the pink, bioluminescent spores beneath. Its lifecycle consists of being eaten by an insect, taking control of its new host to guide it to a suitable spot to fruit in which time the inside of the insects body gets almost completely digested. When it finds the right spot, it will completely digest its host, burrow its mycelium into the ground and fruit. A species of amphibian Andrias candentis uses the spores as a bug repelent and eats the fungus, later depositing its spores via excrement. The spores are also slowly released into the air which makes the space around the mushroom glow in small, pink lights. The fungus is found in small clusters and is used by dwarves as an insect repelent.

Honeycomb fungus

(Armillaria favus) is an edible species of fungus commonly found in svartil cuisine. It is found in numerous clusters, the mushroom itself is green, glowing via bioluminescence in a faint lime light. Honeycomb fungus is facultative ectoparasite of the colossal umbrella mushroom species. Average height of this fungus is 16 cm. Its taste is described to have a faint honey favour.

Capped bristle

(Cooksonia tubadensis) is a species of a land plants and a member of a stem group Rhyniophytes which is extinct in Midgard. The plant has no leaves, just a green stem and bioluminescent terminal sporangiums on the ends. The plant doesn’t get its energy from sunlight, but a microscopic fungal species found within its epidermis which convert elements found in the air and convert them to usable energy.

Fan fungus

(Pleurotus flabellum) is a species of edible, parasitic fungus. It has a broad, fan-shaped cap and its colours range from white to black or brown. The Mushroom’s stipe is absent and is directly attached to its host (giant fungi species: Coprinus liquesquamae, Macrolepiota perampabella, Psilocybe ogivalagigas). It is a white-rot wood-decay fungus and is often found on decaying mushrooms. Fan fungus is edible and is used often in nidvel cuisine in soups, stews, as a meat substitute or breaded.

Large blue hair

(Conocybe caeruleupillum magna) is a species of common fungus. The mushroom is found growing in large groups on top of similarly coloured blue moss in Bright Forests. It grows on avarage around 180 cm in height. Stalk is long and thin, on top of which lies a small, thin cap. Gills of this fungus glows a light blue colour to attract animals which spread its spores.

Blue hair

(Conocybe caeruleupillum minima) is a sub-species of common C. caeruleupillum species. The mushroom is found growing in large groups on top of similarly coloured blue moss in Bright Forests. It grows on avarage around 70 cm in height. Stalk is long and thin, on top of which lies a small, thin cap. Gills of this fungus glows a light blue colour to attract animals which spread its spores.

Dead man's fingers

(Cordyceps nigrucaule) is a species of poisonous, psychadelic fungus. The stem and cap are merged together, creating a long shaft with tiny pores. This body is mostly black and appeares to be decaying. Avarage height of the fugnus is 90 cm. Its spores are toxic to humans and when inhaled can cause a psychadelic episode, nausea, increased heartbeat and sweating. It is advised to avoid them to prevent kicking up the spores.

Ballcap mushroom

(Boletus densos) is a species of common, edible fungus. It reaches on average 11 cm in height. Stem is round and a white-orange colour whilst its cap is small and orange in colour. Its a staple farm crop which is very common in nidvel cuisine.

King's cup

(Sarcoscypha pateraurea) is a species commonly found in Giant Forests. It feeds on decaying matter found on the forest floor. It reaches on avarage 7 cm in height. The stem isn’t visible below the yellow and orange, cup-shaped cap. The mushrooms is edible, but has a bitter taste.

Plos

(Mollis stratum) is a species unique to Niðavellir. It’s a symbiosis of moss and fungus. The many subspecies of plos is seen in most Niðavellir biomes blanketing stone surfaces. 

Plos sub-species are:

  • Yellow plos (M. s. serenum) found in Dark Fields and Dark Hills
  • Lime plos (M. s. calcis) found in Fungal Swamps
  • Blue plos (M. s. aqua) found in Glowing Forests
  • Purple plos (M. s. purpura) found in Giant Forests
  • Black plos (M. s. necrosis) found in Black Forests

Natural Resources

Building Materials

  • Mushroom stems from different types of giant fungus with properties similar to wood, mushroom caps
  • Stone, deepslate, tuff, andesite, sandstone, brick, mud brick, dripstone
  • Soil, sand, moss, gravel

Ores

C

Coal/Carbon

12,011

Fuel

Coal is the most important source of fuel in all of the seven realms.

C

Diamond/Carbon

12,011

Armour

A precious gemstone useful for crafting durable armour and weapons, but also for alloys

Ti

Titanium

47,867

Alloying

Lightweight, high-strength, low-corrosion metal used by, but most useful for alloying

Fe

Iron

55,845

Items

Useful for tools and miscellaneous items especially when alloyed with carbon

Cu

Copper

63,546

Piping

Due to its high corrosion resistance and low thermal expansion it is often used for pipes

Ag

Silver

107,87

Undead

Valued for its beuty, but also the property of being very efficient against the undead

Sn

Tin

118,71

Alloying

Resistant to oxygen, it is very useful for alloying with other metals such as iron or copper

Au

Gold

196,97

Decoration

Malleable, lustrous and rare metal used most often in trivial things to show off wealth

Faunal, floral and fungal products

  • Guano
    used as fertiliser and ingredient in gunpowder
  • Salamander (meat)
    edible meat
  • Biofluorescent goo
    harvested from glowing giant salamanders and blind dragons
  • Bioluminescent goo (blue, purple, black)
    harvested from greater fox-like bats, spiritlights, melting scales mushroom, giant bell mushroom
  • Blind dragon scale
    harvested from adult blind dragons and used for blind dragon armour
  • Blind dragon tooth
    harvested from adult blind dragons and used for potions
  • Blind dragon claw
    harvested from adult blind dragons and used for a special enchantment (Sixth Sense(I-III))
  • Blind dragon flesh
    harvested from adult blind dragons
  • Blind dragon spawn
  • Silk
    farmed from spiritlight larve and used for trading or for silk blocks
  • Spiritlight egg
    1-9 eggs
  • Beowulf horn
    harvested from adult, female beowulf beetles and used for potions of strength
  • Beowulf egg
    1-3 eggs
  • Mushroom ink
    produced by a decaying melting scales mushroom and can be used as a substitute for squid ink
  • Melting scales goo
    an adhesive substance produced by melting scales mushrooms
  • Umbrella mushroom
    immature colossal umbrella mushrooms
  • Umbrella cutlet
    cooked immature colossal umbrella mushrooms
  • Priest’s blood
    psychedelic liquid extracted from giant bell gills
  • Salamander’s rattle fungus
    used for poison potions and as an insect repelant
  • Fan fungus
    edible and farmable fungus
  • Ballcap mushroom
    edible and farmable fungus

Alternative Names

Realm of the Dwarves, Realm of Stone, Svartalfheim, Nida-fells, Niðavöllom, Nidavellir, Dark Fields

Type

Cave System

Location under

Included Locations

Included Organisations

Inhabiting Species

Characters in Location

Jamie Marjanić

Front-end Developer