Rift: Planes of Telara

Platform(s): PC
Genre: Online Multiplayer
Publisher: Ubisoft (EU), Trion Worlds (US)
Developer: Trion Worlds
Release Date: March 1, 2011 (US), March 4, 2011 (EU)

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'Rift: Planes of Telara' Details Gloamwood - Screens & Trailer

by Rainier on July 28, 2010 @ 1:58 a.m. PDT

Rift: Planes of Telara is an online game set in a world being torn apart by dimensional "rifts" that tear into the land of Telara, releasing powerful forces that threaten the very existence of the entire universe.

Get the Rift: Planes of Telara [PC] Trailer off WP (40mb)

Rifts and other dynamic events can be triggered by players, scheduled by the development team, or even occur spontaneously. Dynamic events within the game can lead to a range of changes across the world, including everything from minor events to dramatic shifts in the game’s landscape and the opening of new areas. Players will connect with hundreds of thousands of other gamers to battle creatures overrunning the world, as well as each other.

Gloamwood

The Dark, Dark Wood

Sun-dappled Silverwood can lull newly returned Ascended into a false confidence that while the creatures of the rifts are fearsome, they can be stopped before they wreak havoc on Telara. But naïve heroes see the havoc firsthand when their quests lead into Gloamwood. For this is a deeper, darker forest, where corruption from the planes rises from deep underground, to poison trees and communities at the root.

Guardians traveling to Gloamwood find themselves surrounded by lank trees, white of root with pale green trunks, and mostly bare of leaves. The Shade still lingers here, and the sun rarely peeks into the misted sky, which is jaundiced yellow by day and bruised red by night, an endless twilight that gives Gloamwood its name. The soil here is wet and black, and sometimes bears the strange footprints of the creatures that creep between the trees.

Silkweb Pass

Travelers must push through Silkweb Pass, careful not to tangle their limbs in the thick webs that stretch from tree to tree, or to lose the gauzy path. Giant spiders skitter along the webbing, pouncing upon travelers in venomous packs. Tales tell of their Broodmother, and perhaps a wanderer who loses the path might catch a glint off her carapace before a stinger as long a sword pierces his gut.


Gloamwood Pines

The village of Gloamwood Pines slouches in the darkening wood, its people sullen and mistrustful, refusing strangers hospitality even as they seek help to keep their village alive. Grisly murders have long plagued Gloamwood Pines, and though all evidence points to a huge beast, no amount of culling the local predators has stopped the killer.

Villagers also speak of the hag who lives in Deepwood Cottage. She was old when the toothless village grandfathers were but little boys, toiling over her curses or peering out at the woods with milky eyes visible through a slit in the curtains. Some say the hag and Gloamwood are one, and you might be tempted to believe it when you watch the knotted shadows grasp at the trees.

The Goblin Menace

Civilized folk work hard to keep Gloamwood’s goblins in check, but the vicious little creatures have recently grown bold, spreading through the wood and attacking even armed patrols. The goblins are sometimes bigger and stronger than usual and mad with bloodlust, goaded by their Gedlo priests to greater and greater ferocity.

Unworked gray stones as high as ten men stand in the forest, arranged into an impossible formation. They have lurked in their clearing for centuries, radiating a forgotten, sinister purpose. The goblins have infested these Standing Stones, and lash out at anyone who comes too close.

The goblins built their city in the drainage system for Shadefallen Keep, expanding it with their own rude tunnels and gouging ever deeper into the ground. Adventurers bold and foolish enough to invade these Darkening Deeps might find the source of the goblins’ newfound aggression, rescue villagers from Gloamwood Pines, or meet their end in a storm of fire and claw.

The Mathosian Mill

A stately mill once funneled resources from Gloamwood to Mathosian markets, until it was corrupted by the Shade. Arisen from their graves or shambling from Death Rifts, undead horrors overran the mill and slaughtered its workers. Entrepreneurs talk of mounting an expedition to reclaim this precious outpost, but until then, only the rattle of bones and the creaking of a disused millwheel can be heard from the old Mathosian Mill.

Shadefallen Keep and the Endless Court

Rumors swirl through Gloamwood Pines. Locals claim to have seen lights coming from Shadefallen Keep, abandoned since the dead rose over a century ago, and fear that agents of the Endless Court have trickled like a bitter creek over the crags and into the heart of the forest. Supposedly, an ancient artifact was lost in Gloamwood, and only evil can come of death cultists getting their hands on it.
Even if these rumors are true, and heroes defeat the cultists, the residents still say that “when you stop one threat in Gloamwood, another one always rises in its place.” Some Ascended are undone when they realize that Telara’s salvation is but a pinprick of light at the end of an impossibly long tunnel. Many more realize that Gloamwood’s ruin is testament to the cost of failure, and plunge headlong into the dark forest.

These heroes carry the light of salvation into Gloamwood, or vanish like a snuffed candle flame.
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