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The Dusk-Singing Wind — in-engine atmosphere capture

THE LORE · THE EASTERN CRAGS

The Dusk-Singing Wind

The constant wind of the Eastern Crags that, at dusk, produces a tonal hum from the mesas' wind-carved geometry — a sound the Bonesung read as the unmarked dead speaking, and the Far College reads as ordinary wind-carved acoustics, nothing more.

The mesas of the Eastern Crags are riddled with wind-cut channels, pockets, and throat-passages that the prevailing east wind finds at dusk when the thermal gradient sharpens. The result is a layered low hum that builds through the last hour of light and fades after dark — not a melody, not a human sound, but close enough to a sustained chord that it troubles the ear. The Bonesung of the Vale say the wind sings because the unmarked dead have no ancestor-poles and nowhere else to send their names. Old Dabbeth says it is the same chord as the Unhushed Tower's third landing, and he has listened to both long enough that he may be right.

KIND

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Type Fields
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All Relationships (4)

references

  • Old DabbethDabbeth is the primary interpreter of the dusk-singing wind, having listened to it alongside the Tower's hum for forty years.
  • The Unhushed TowerOld Dabbeth says the dusk-singing wind produces the same tone as the Unhushed Tower's third landing — the two sounds share the same wind-carved acoustic, nothing more, though he says it like it's more.
  • The Bonesung-of-the-ValeThe Bonesung-of-the-Vale interpret the dusk-singing wind as the voices of the unmarked dead who have no ancestor-poles.

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  • The Eastern CragsThe dusk-singing wind is a feature of the Eastern Crags — it is produced by the mesa geometry at the specific topographic conditions here.

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The Dusk-Singing Wind — Valenfeld — Valenfeld