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The Nolands
June 8, 2026 at 10:51 PM
Removed duplicate in-body wikilinks
The Nolands are the surviving human people in Everland. Their ancestors built a civilization under the protection of four elemental deities, but that civilization was destroyed during The War Between Heaven and Man. The Nolands now live as scattered communities, scavenging pre-war ruins and struggling to survive in a hostile world.
Before the war, the Nolands' ancestors were a prosperous people who had mastered construction, agriculture, and craftsmanship under divine guidance. Temples to the four elemental forces dotted their cities, and their technology incorporated elemental energy into everyday tools and structures.
When the divine forces turned destructive, the civilization collapsed in a matter of generations. The survivors who managed to endure the calamities became the Nolands, named for the loss of their lands. Knowledge of pre-war technology was largely lost, preserved only in scattered ruins and oral tradition.
The Nolands live in small, loosely connected settlements. They are resourceful and adaptive, having learned to read weather patterns, avoid calamity zones, and build structures that can withstand environmental threats. Their communities depend on foraging, hunting, and the occasional salvage run into dangerous ruin sites.
The player character is a member of the Nolands. Over the course of the game, the player works to rebuild, explore Everland's lost regions, and uncover the truth behind the war. The player is accompanied by Elle, a mysterious companion whose connection to Everland's past may hold answers.
The Nolands' overarching goal is restoration. They want to reclaim their homeland, rebuild their civilization, and, if possible, understand and reverse the forces that destroyed it. Whether that means making peace with the elemental forces or finding a way to stop them entirely is not yet clear.
The game's official description gives the pre-war Nolands a one-line summary: "Once, under the blessing of the deities, your forebears forged a once-resplendent civilization, an era of wondrous crafts and countless creations." The phrasing positions the pre-war Nolands as a peak of craftsmanship and creation, not a primitive society. Their fall is therefore a collapse from a height, which informs both the game's tone (mournful reclamation rather than discovery) and the player's narrative role (restoration of a remembered glory, not the founding of a new culture).
The Nolands of the present are scattered survivors of that collapse. Their settlements are small, loosely federated, and built among the ruins of pre-war infrastructure. Knowledge of the old crafts persists in fragments, recovered through salvage runs into dangerous ruin sites and through oral tradition between settlements.