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Table of Contents
Geography | Regions
DARK SEA REGION
Overview
The Dark Sea Region is an expansive, ice-cold ocean located on the Dark Side of VOI 700 D. Covering an estimated 700,000 square kilometers — an area roughly the size of Mongolia on Earth— it is the largest known body of water on the Dark Side and remains one of the most mysterious and least explored regions of the planet.
Unlike the Regions of the Habitual Belt, where perpetual twilight allows for some warmth and vegetation, the Dark Sea is locked in eternal night, with its waters hovering just above freezing due to the planet’s lack of a natural heat source. Large portions of the ocean are covered in thick ice, while others remain liquid due to deep geothermal activity. The absence of sunlight has led to the evolution of unique bioluminescent marine ecosystems, making the Dark Sea one of the strangest and most hostile environments on VOI 700 D.
The western shores of the Dark Sea are bordered by the Ralar Region, where the active volcano Ralar releases geothermal heat into the ocean, creating a rare microclimate along the coastline. Here, pockets of warmth support life, forming thermal vents and tidepools where flora and fauna thrive in defiance of the harsh environment.
To the north and east, the Dark Sea extends into absolute darkness, with unknown depths, ice formations the size of mountains, and unfathomable trenches that plunge into the abyss. There are no confirmed Exohuman expeditions that have successfully mapped these waters, and the Native Tribes do not claim this region, believing it to be the realm of unseen spirits.
Geography and Landscapes
The Dark Sea Region is defined by its icy waters, frozen archipelagos, geothermal coastlines, and abyssal trenches. Its unrelenting cold and lack of light have shaped its unique geography, which consists of the following key features:
- Coastal Shoreline (Ralar Region Border): A rare geothermal coastline where volcanic activity from Ralar Volcano warms the waters, creating tidepools, hot springs, and sulfur vents along the shore. This coastline harbors bioluminescent algae, heat-resistant bacteria, and deep-sea predators that come closer to the surface to feed in the warmer currents. Ice formations along the shore are weaker than in other areas, breaking apart due to the geothermal shifts beneath the ocean floor.
- Frozen Ocean Expanses: The majority of the Dark Sea is locked beneath a thick ice sheet, which ranges from several meters to hundreds of meters thick. Massive icebergs and shifting glacial formations dominate the landscape, moving slowly over millennia. In some areas, deep cracks and crevasses in the ice reveal glimpses of the unfathomable ocean below, though no recorded expedition has successfully penetrated its depths.
- Subsurface Trenches and Geothermal Anomalies: Underneath the ice, vast trenches and hydrothermal vent fields may exist, warmed by geothermal activity from VOI 700 D’s interior.Some deep-sea regions could house extremophile organisms, thriving in complete darkness and high-pressure environments.
Flora
Life in the Dark Sea Region is extremely rare, limited to a few specialized organisms that thrive in the warmer coastal pockets and subglacial zones.
- Thermophilic Algae – Found in warm melt pools near the volcanic coastline, forming thin, bioluminescent layers beneath the ice.
- Geothermal Fungi – Similar to those in the Ralar Region's Geothermal Caves, these fungi feed off volcanic minerals and cling to thermal vents.
- Deep-Sea Chemosynthetic Bacteria – Hypothetical extremophiles that might exist in hydrothermal vent systems deep below the ice.
Fauna
The Dark Sea's frozen and sunless expanse limits animal life to a few highly adapted species that thrive in thermal refuges or beneath the ice.
- Abyssal Predators – Potential deep-sea creatures lurking in unexplored trenches.
- Ice-Dwelling Scavengers – Small, crustacean-like creatures feeding on organic material trapped in glacial layers.
- Glacial Stalkers – Hypothetical apex predators that roam the coastal ice, adapted for hunting in complete darkness.
- Dark Sea Flyers – Mysterious winged creatures rumored to nest in geothermal caves along the shoreline.
- For a detailed list of creatures, see Known Wildlife of the Dark Sea.
Population
The Dark Sea Region is completely uninhabited, apart from temporary Exohuman expeditions in the Beta Age and occasional Outlaw activity in the Gamma Age.
Exohuman Presence
- Scientific Outposts (Beta Age only) – Small research teams occasionally visit the volcanic shoreline to study subglacial conditions and extremophile life.
- Illegal Activity (Gamma Age only) – Some outlaw groups are rumored to use ice caves along the shore as temporary hideouts, though permanent survival is unlikely.
Tactical Advice for Dungeon Masters
The Dark Sea Region provides a truly alien and isolating setting, perfect for survival horror, deep-sea mysteries, and high-stakes expeditions.
Exploration and Survival Challenges
- Complete Darkness – The Dark Sea is perpetually pitch-black, requiring specialized vision equipment or bioluminescent guides.
- Unstable Ice Sheets – The frozen ocean is riddled with hidden crevasses, making traversal extremely dangerous.
- Subglacial Terrors – If anything lives in the deep, it remains undiscovered and highly dangerous.
Mysteries and Hidden Dangers
- The Lost Vessel – Rumors persist of a vanished Exohuman research ship, its wreckage still drifting beneath the ice.
- Deep-Sea Behemoth – What if something enormous lurks in the depths?
- Ancient Relics – Could the Dark Sea hide ruins or artifacts of an unknown civilization?
Related Pages and Further Information
Known Neighboring Regions:
- Ralar Region (Northern and Western / Dark Side)
- Vazhak (Eastern / Dark Side)