Forrestial
Just in the name, you have a general idea of what to expect. Forrestial is a large-sized country, but with the lowest population of less than five hundred people. The reason why this country has such a small population is because it’s expensive to live there, so imagine spending a day or less there. Forrestial is prized for its wide span of woods and forests and its diversity of plants and trees, so it’s extremely easy to become lost in the woods, mainly when night rolls around. That is another reason people barely visit the country.
The trees are fairly tall, ranging from ten feet to about over seventy feet. The branches and leaves can extend a few meters out from the trunk of the tree and the leaves aren’t as transparent as they should be, so sunlight can be blocked out easily. Since people get lost easily and the civilians of Forrestial lives miles and miles away from each other, people are found dead annually. Around six-hundred deaths are reported every five years, or one hundred and twenty deaths per year. The cause of death can vary from either starvation, dehydration, heat stroke, heart attack, mauled by a bear, or shot down by one of the few hunters in the country that had mistaken the person for an animal.
It has been globally recommended that people don’t visit or travel through if they are going from one country to another and Forrestial is in the middle of the trip. It’s advised to go around unless people are ready to fend for themselves for a few days until they manage to get out of the country. There’s been reports of strange inhumane markings along the trees and cars and sometimes on dead corpses, but they don’t match up with any animal markings across the globe, which is another reason why traveling to Forrestial is highly unrecommended until the threat has been caught.
The attacks have only seemed to stop after the death of Emily P. Danali.
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