Wonder how the planet can support all that weight. Anyway, the ocean of Hallowfall is teeming with life, which is interesting-mostly animal life, which makes sense, tube worms, starfish, sea lilies, urchins, corals, clams-but a lot of kelp, even whole forests, and I’m not gonna rabbithole into how plants got that deep into the earth anymore than I’m gonna wonder where the bears came from.
Of course there’s a couple things down there, why else would I be here? Directly west of the Sacred Flame cathedral are some sunken dirigibles and an unlootable chest with one page from the captain’s log.
North of the island where Lorel’s Crossing is, are three narrow islands; northeast of the shrimp-shaped middle one, about 1.5 centimeters, is an underwater village of purple huts made from giant fish and urchins, with a glowing spiky cone in the center. No one’s there. It’s in a kelp forest.
On the northern fatigue zone, across a trench, there are all these great spires of rock that can be flown to, but they still come up as fatigue zone so they can’t really be explored.
On the western fatigue zone, if you stand on the edge and look down into the dark…there’s a balcony, massive beyond comprehension, with sharp corners. Oh, we can say it’s an echo or ghost of the way Blizz constructs game environments, but I wonder…the titans built a lot of machinery throughout and within Azeroth, no one knows the extent of it, and I wonder if this balcony is part of some artifice…and I also wonder, with all these subterranean realms, how Azeroth’s soul fits into all this. Is the balcony a box and the soul’s in there? Maybe I’ve been turtling too much.
I haven’t seen this, but you can save an old god squid and he says not to go to the deeps because he doesn’t want to have to kill you because he likes you.
Does it look technological?
Did you take screenshots?
Fun fact: The earth’s mantle holds several times all the water at or near the surface. Not as liquid water, mind. But, still.
Fun Fact #2: The largest submerged cavern (we know of) is some 228-ish miles long and ranges between 60 to 300 feet in depth—You could very nearly stuff the Chrysler Building in it.
They recently found an underground ocean on Mars that should it ever be brought to the surface of the planet would cover it with a mile deep ocean. Meaning that oceans under the crust of planets aren’t unheard of and we may have them here on Earth as well.