1) Sure! Originally, the volcanic island was known as Uttersea, as to seafaring Northmen it marked the beginning of vast open seas, uncharted and “empty of all but storms.” The rich volcanic soil, coupled with the volcanic heat that still warms the half-collapsed... #realmslore
Replying to @TheEdVerse
@TheEdVerse Hello from France, I'm an old DM and a great fan of Forgotten Realms. Currently I'm running a campaign near Tuern and particularly Uttersea. I wasn't able to find a map of that small town. Do you have any advise for its design please.
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2) ...caldera and the bay that now fills its missing southern arc, made it great for farming, so the Northmen seized it and settled. The land became known as Tuern after an early leader, and the settlement known as Uttersea. It was settled haphazardly, but frequent... #realmslore
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3) landslides forced a design on it that persists today: stone wharves jut out into the bay and are joined together along the shore into a hard “dock” with two large “beaching ramps” where ships large and small can be winched ashore; upland of both ramps are large... #realmslore
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4) ...shipbuilding sheds. Above them, Uttersea climbs the slopes of the caldera, which are thickly planted with clinging vines and stunted shrubs and trees to anchor the “clinker” stone-rubble-dominated soil as much as possible. Streets follow a switchback pattern: .. #realmslore
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5) ...: from the ends of the dock, packed-clinker roads curve along the caldera parallel to the dock, like rice-growing terraces on slopes in parts of the real-world Far East, with NO direct uphill/downhill routes, just the curves at both ends of the parallel runs. #realmslore
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6) The best houses are located as high as possible, off to the sides of the main “bands” of streets on their own side-lanes. #realmslore

Apr 13, 2025 · 7:57 PM UTC

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