Ysgard

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Ysgard (Chaotic Good Neutral) Asgard, Gladsheim, The Heroic Domains of Ysgard

Overview

Basics

Ysgard is a plane of an epic scale, with soaring mountains, deep fjords, and dark caverns that hide the secret forges of the dwarves. A biting wind always blows at a hero's back. From the freezing water channels to the sacred groves of Alfheim's elves, Ysgard's terrain is grand and terrible. It is a place of sharp seasons: Winter is a time of darkness and killing cold, and a summer day is scorching and clear. Most spectacular of all, the landscape floats atop immense rivers of earth flowing forever through an endless skyscape. The broadest earthen rivers are the size of continents, while smaller sections, called earthbergs, are island-sized. Fire rages under each river, but only a reddish glow penetrates to the continent's top. Of more concern is the occasional collision between rivers, which produces terrible quakes and sometimes spawns new mountain ranges. Ysgard is the home of slain heroes who wage eternal battle on fields of glory. When these petitioners fall, they rise again the next morning to continue eternal warfare. Ysgard is the home to multiple deities. The plane boasts three layers; Ysgard, Muspelheim and Nidavellir.

Ysgard traits

Ysgard has the following traits.

  • Normal Gravity.
  • Normal Time.
  • Infinite Size: Ysgard goes on forever, but its wellknown realms have boundaries within the plane as a whole.
  • Divinely Morphic: Specific powerful beings (such as the deities Kord and Olidammara) can alter Ysgard with a thought. Ordinary creatures find Ysgard as easy to alter as the Material Plane is-they can be affected by spells and physical effort normally. But deities can change vast areas, creating great realms for themselves.
  • No Elemental Traits: No one element dominates on Ysgard; all are in balance as on the Material Plane. However, pans of the second layer, Muspelheim, are treated as if they possessed the fire-dominant trait.
  • Normal magic

Ysgard links

Permanent portals exist between various planes and Ysgard. One of the most notable is a particularly roughhewn extension of the Infinite Staircase, which connects to countless planes. Multiple landings offer a chance to ascend or descend the Infinite Staircase from each of Ysgard's three layers. There is also Yggdrasil, The World Ash, a large tree whose branches reach out to all the planes where the Aesir are worshipped. The top of that tree is located in Ysgard.

Ysgard Inhabitants

Petitioners, the slain heroes of countless ages, predominate on Ysgard. However, humanoids of all kinds live throughout the top layer of Ysgard (also called Ysgard). The fiery middle layer, called Muspelheim, is home mostly to fire giants, while the cavernous lowest layer, called Nidavellir, is home to dwarves. The plane is also home to scattered ghaele eladrin and firre eladrin, celestials, and a few devas.

Ysgard Petitioners

The petitioners of Ysgard are mostly former soldiers whose aggressive and valiant spirits draw them to the plane where competition never dies. The memory of their former lives are foggy at best, all they know is that they were great warriors.

Layers

Ysgard

The top layer of Ysgard, also called Ysgard, is far and away the most well known and well traveled of the three layers. Most of the inhabitants live in camps and rugged settlements with rough and wild conditions. The layer is dotted with dozens of huge halls, smoking battlefields, and hilly terrain leading down to cold seas. Few settlements exist along the edges of any of the earthbergs, except those interested in trade with communities on other earthbergs.

Islands of Hala

The story of Hala is an interesting one, and one too large for a small description, so here is a brief synopsis of its history: A group of ysgardians got fed up with the constant fighting in Kord's Realm. They built the first airship and flew out of his concentrated realm. They landed on an island known as Aulus Isle and built the first city - Nagritch - around a large crystal which seemed to give the powerless paladins and clerics back some of their ability. Kord decided to let them go, realizing that they'd probably just have a miserable time and come home eventually. Several sects of the fleeing group were not happy with the way Nagritch was being run, and all split off. Each of these groups founded the other three cities of hala: Nantes, Felmoran, and Hangate. Each of these four cities refused to worship any sort of god. Nantes was named after the leader of the city, and he approached the status of demigod. The mages of Nagritch obsessed with the crystal and built a tower around it so they could study it. Many of the mages fell into corruption. After many years Kord officially gave up on the Halatians, and refused to exert any of his power to do anything for the island. At this point, the demons saw an opportunity to get a foot into Ysgard. The opportunity was taken, and they caused the 'great split'. In the days of the four cities, Hala was a vast green island with massive lakes, rolling hills, and no berg bridges attaching broken parts. The great split changed all of that. It tore the land into pieces and scattered all the cities. Nantes was destroyed, Felmoran was destroyed, Hangate was cast into rubble and became more of a mining village, and Nagritch was the only thing that stayed up.

Kord's Realm

The deity of the strong and courageous, Kord the Brawler lives in the Hall of the Valiant on this plane. His grand hall is built of stout beams of wood hewn from a single massive ash tree. Within, Kord presides over a never-ending banquet where honored guests come and go, but the revelry never ends. The feast tables surround a great open space where valiant heroes wrestle for sport. Sometimes, Kord himself sets aside his intelligent dragonslaying greatsword, Kelmar, and his dragon-hide accoutrements, and enters the square to the great delight of all assembled.

Plain of Ida

This great field is located near the Hall of the Valiant and the great free city of Himinborg, the largest population center on the layer. The Plain of Ida hosts daily festivals where warriors can flaunt their mettle. Here, bravery and skill in battle is valued over all else.

Alfheim

Elven petitioners populate this brilliant, sunlit region, as does a contingent of mortal elves. Alfheim is suffused with light and joy, and visitors cannot help but be buoyed by the happiness in the air. The lands are wild and beautiful, untouched by civilization. Wildlife is plentiful, and natural features such as streams, forests, and sunny hills are likewise bountiful. The elven natives are friendly, but they care little for anything but games and meditative appreciation of their natural surroundings. While many elves live in harmony with nature among the trees and fields of the surface, some elves abide in glittering caves below the surface of Alfheim. Alfheim has seasons. Summers are long and kind, and its winters are dark and unforgiving. During winter, the elves retreat into the glittering caves, the entrances to which are sealed off and buried during the season of snows.

Den of Olidammara

The god of rogues, Olidammara the Laughing Rogue is an intermediate deity who concerns himself with music, revels, wine, humor, and similar ideals. Wood, stone, and stranger substances create a grand but haphazard structure, as if several mansions of various cultures were mashed together. On the inside, mazes, locked doors, blind hallways, and secret treasuries surround a grand hall where music and dancing are mandatory. Usually, the guests of this inmost den include rogues, bards, performers, and entertainers of all stripes and all places. Wine, romance, and song rule here, where Olidammara lounges at his ease on a grand divan-unless he is disguised as one of his many guests using his magic laughing mask. Because some terrible prank often draws him far away from his den, other deities treat Olidammara with deserved caution no matter where they are.

Muspelheim

The middle layer of Ysgard, Muspelheim, is made from ribbons of floating earth, some continent-sized or larger. Here, though, the ground smokes and burns, earning this layer the name "Land of Fire." It's a hostile layer where even the ground is sharp volcanic rock. Most of Muspelheim has the fire-dominant trait. Muspelheim's ground rolls toward a ridge of fiery mountains at the highest point. This range, called the Serpent Spine, is home to hundreds of clans of fire giants. Watchtowers and citadels defend the mountain passes against rival clans and unwanted visitors. The Spire is a towering, needle-thin citadel of dark stone in the midst of the Serpent Spine mountains. Devout fire giant maidens are said to inhabit the tower, serving as clerics of a mysterious intermediate deity of fire giants.

Nidavellir

The third layer of Ysgard is Nidavellir. It is an "underground" realm crisscrossed by warm tunnels, heated by hot springs and geysers. The wild regions are crowded with underground forests of strange woods that need no sun, only heat, to grow. Vast caverns run through veins of clear quartz, and deep holds are studded with shining mica and pyrite. Precious and semiprecious minerals are strewn across the floor of some lengths of tunnel and even entire caverns. Dwarven and gnome kingdoms divide up most of Nidavellir. Most of the layer's inhabitants are mortals, but petitioners are common as well. It is a place of fiery furnaces, ringing anvils, and constant striving for perfection in the crafts of smithing, runecrafting, and magic. Its halls resound with the chanting voices of dwarves and the lilting songs of gnomes. Though the two races are rivals often given to war, they unite when confronted by their underground enemies: dark elves.

Svartalfheim

Drow have their own realm in Nidavellir. Though the gnomes and dwarves think the worst of the dark elves, the allegiances of these particular drow are not as evil as many travelers might think. Like others of this layer, they merely wish to be left alone and they don't take kindly to unannounced visitors or trespassers. There are however some drow houses who have taken to the way of most of their brethern on other planes.

Large cities

Bastion

Generic information on Bastion

Nagritch

Generic information on Nagritch

Villages

Mirtho Rest

Generic information on Mithro

Heidabyr

Generic information on Heidabyr