Fahrlend: The Great Myst

Fahrlend: The Great Myst was an unreleased project and would have been the second game in the Fahrlend single player RPG series. The game was more than halfway done according to developers, and therefore is still referred to as many as the "second Fahrlend game."

Overview
Because the game was never released, we only know as much as the developers have shared with us. The main story revolved around Hero and his companion, Hyli, who was a fairy that is comparative to Navi from the Legend of Zelda series. The story was about the land of Dnelrhaf, a mirrored world of Fahrlend. After Xerce of the Corruption was killed, he resurrected himself and created a mirrored world of Fahrlend that, although began as prosperous, became a world of evil and corruption. The great crystal that held the land together began to shatter overtime to Xerce's desire, and eventually split into 6 pieces and were spread across the land. After shattering, a great mist corrupted the world, known to natives as the "Great Myst." Although Xerce is the antagonist still, he is never clearly stated to be until the end of the game, according to developers.

Playstyle
The playstyle of GM mirrored heavily that of Fahrlend: Corruption. There were 6 dungeons, still, each with a mini-boss, dungeon item, and boss. All dungeons had new and creative puzzles and contained a piece of the great crystal. However, rewards for exploration and side-quests were heavily improved and seen as main focuses according to developers. Also, a "teleportation room" was also introduced, in which you could find buttons on spawn points across the world and place them in the room to use as a teleporter to said spawn point. This would have been extremely useful as it would only require the player to remember/write down the teleportation room's coordinates.

Never Released
The game paused development for an unknown reason in mid-2018. As developers came back to the map, they discovered an inability to add structures into the map through the MCEdit functionality. With the game more than halfway done, they ultimately decided to cease development for good and start a new game, which would end up becoming Fahrlend: Invasion. Even though the game never released, developers ask fans to consider the game as canon, as the story and characters may be seen in future games.