Ages of Myst III: Exile

What follows is a list of visited in the game Myst III: Exile.

List of Ages
J'nanin

*Geography: Small rocky island, with small lake in middle
*Inhabitants: Saavedro
*Written By: Atrus
*Creatures: Squee (imported from Edanna), flies and fish
*Flora: Grass, barnacle moss, shrubs, and other plants imported from Edanna
*Theme: None; hub Age

The Age of J'nanin was written by Atrus as the hub for his lesson Ages: Edanna, Voltaic, Amateria, and Narayan. He wrote these lesson Ages to teach his sons, Sirrus and Achenar the underlying concepts of writing Ages, and how certain principles governed the outcome of the Age.

J'nanin is a small rocky island in the middle of an endless ocean, with a small lake in the middle. Three tusk-like buildings rise up from the cliff faces of the island, and one stands in a lagoon at the center of the island. Each tusk holds a linking book to one of the lesson Ages. This is the Age that Saavedro was trapped on for over 20 years, until came in an attempt to retrieve the Releeshahn book, stolen by Saavedro.



Edanna

*Geography: Vast ecosystem in a massive tree, consisting of a ridge, a forest and a swamp on several levels
*Inhabitants: None
*Written By: Atrus
*Creatures: Squee, Grossamary Birds, Moths, Electra Rays, Seabirds, flies and Fish
*Flora: Lens Blossom, Corcscrew Cattail, Quaffler Figs, Lambent Orchids, Aurora Blossoms, Vesuvi Mushrooms, Swing Vines Tongue Ferns, Venus Flytraps, Fan Palms, Jumping Dragons, Nemel Lotus', Venus Flytraps, Barnacle Moss and Other Plants
*Theme: Nature

Edanna was one of the lesson-Ages Linked to from J'nanin. Atrus wrote the Age to illustrate the concepts of nature and the inter-dependence of elements within the environment; specifically, Nature Encourages Mutual Dependence.

The name of this Age might be based on Eden, the Biblical paradise, which is believed to be a vast park or garden with a perfectly balanced ecosystem.

The Age itself consists of an incredibly large 200 ft. tall tree in the middle of a great expanse of ocean. There are three distinct eco-systems within the tree, starting from the top and going down:
* Deadwood Ridge (Upper, Middle, and Lower)
* The Forest
* The Swamp

Each region not only provided an entirely different look than the last, but an entirely new set of puzzles to solve, while somehow able to maintain continuity in terms of inter-dependence of one another. This was also the first Age in the Myst franchise of games to be completely nature-based, thus there are no machines or other man-made objects present, save for the imager Atrus installed to continue his sons on their path of learning the concepts of writing an Age, and a trap used by Saavedro to collect animal skins. The original message from Atrus is lost, due to Saavedro recording his own over Atrus' original words.



Amateria

*Geography: Island of basaltic columns
*Inhabitants: None
*Written By: Atrus
*Creatures: Possibly Fish
*Flora: Moss, Grasses and Algae
*Theme: Dynamic Forces

Amateria was one of the lesson-Ages Linked to from J'nanin. The concept of this Age to convey to Atrus' sons was that Dynamic Forces Spur Change.

The Age itself is an island, apparently composed of basalt columns (somewhat resembling the Giant's Causeway), with oriental-like pagodas built on it, set in the middle of a vast, dark ocean. The sky is that of a setting sun, with a dark overcast sky looming on the horizon, occasionally throwing lightning down in the distance. The island itself is covered in a network of tracks used to move the unique crystal balls that roll throughout the Age. The balls themselves are created using special crystals from the Age itself, along with a water lathe.

The Age's name is a possible reference to the real-world Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu.



Voltaic

*Geography: Desolate rocky island
*Inhabitants: None
*Written By: Atrus
*Creatures: Possibly Fish
*Flora: None
*Theme: Energy

Voltaic was one of the lesson-Ages Linked to from J'nanin.

This Age was written by Atrus to display the concept that Energy Powers Future Motion. The sons first had to power up the various forms of energy that were built into the Age, including a Hydroelectric dam and a geothermal power source. By doing this, they were able to create the necessary conditions needed to make the Airship function, which in turn would take them to where they started, and reveal to them the concept they needed to learn.

The Age itself is that of a large island of rust colored rock jutting out from a large expansive sea. The island is riddled with tunnels and valleys, with water flowing through it, as well as lava lying underneath it, to allow all kinds of energy to be harnessed to power future motion.

The name of the Age itself is presumably a reference to the Voltaic pile, an early electric battery.

In Myst IV Revelation, Sirrus mentions Voltaic in a memory. The soundtrack of Spire, his prison Age, has resemblances to the soundtrack of Voltaic.



Narayan

*Geography: Only a few rooms are visited, but several villages in massive trees growing out of the sea are seen
*Inhabitants: Humanoids (Narayani)
*Written By: Atrus
*Creatures: None Visible
*Flora: Massive Lattice Trees and Puffer Spores
*Theme: Balance

Narayan is the culmination of the lesson Ages Atrus wrote for his sons, to show them the physical embodiment of concepts they needed to understand, were they to write Ages of their own. Atrus wrote Narayan to display to his sons the concept Balanced Systems Stimulate Civilizations.

Narayan was an Age covered entirely with ocean, no land masses existing. Extremely large trees called "Lattice Trees" grew from this ocean. Large milky white spores, what Atrus referred to as "Pearls", would periodically float up from the ocean, through the cloud layer, and into the atmosphere. For the Narayani to survive, they had to capture these spores and graft them into the trees to keep the trees from collapsing into the ocean below. To do this, they would play beautiful tunes on "flutes" or "pipes" to lure these spores toward them, where they would then capture the spores with nets. This was a way of life for the Narayani. They had to constantly prune the branches of the trees to keep overgrowth at bay, and bring in new spores to graft as old ones expired.

Before Sirrus and Achenar destroyed the Ages in the Library of Myst, they tried to trick the young of the Narayani people into abandoning their traditions, which in turn would destroy the very structure that kept their civilization alive. Soon after, some of the trees fell into the ocean below, and the rebels of the tradition had realized the grave error they had made in following Atrus' sons. In doing so, they forced Sirrus and Achenar to leave. But one man, Saavedro, followed them to ask them why they did such things and demand that they fix what they had ruined. That is when he was trapped on the Age of J'nanin. When he finally found a way back to Narayan, he could not get past the Crystal Shield Atrus had installed and thought his entire people to be dead. He then swore vengeance on Atrus and his family.

However, the Narayani had somehow survived the death of their old lattice tree long enough to grow two new ones from the ocean, not far from the remnants of their old city (one can be seen at the far left of the screen in the game when the barrier is dropped). This proves the concept of "Balanced Systems Stimulate Civilizations": even if a civilization falls, a new one will take its place soon after if the Age is properly balanced.



Releeshahn

Releeshahn is an that the character Atrus as a temporary home for the D'ni survivors. While the player is not able to enter this Age in the game Myst III: Exile, a small area of Releeshahn is accessible in one of the other games in the series, Myst V: End of Ages. The name Releeshahn is for "the whole".

Tomahna

Tomahna is a fictional location in . During Myst III: Exile, the player character begins the game in this area.

Reception
Macworld notes that each "of the Ages has a unique style with particular challenges."
 
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