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If a telescope were powerful enough, it might find a red star burning in a forgotten patch of sky.
 

Its name is Vharos — the Ember Sun, the Low Burning Eye.
 

And circling it is something impossible. A desert planet.

Three moons. Seasons. Storms. Signs of life.

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By every model and every law scientists trust, this planetary system should have died billions of years ago. Scientists would dismiss it first as an error — a flicker in the data, a distortion in the lensing, a red-spectrum ghost.


But then the signal returns. Again. And again.
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A red star above. Three moons watching. Ancient secrets begin to wake.

The Planet That Shouldn’t Be There

At night, the world cools quickly and becomes a planet of stars. But Zorhros is not dead. There is life on this distant world. And some of it has been waiting a very long time for you to find it.

This chart shows Zorhros in its place within the Vharos System, orbiting a dim red dwarf known to its people as Vharos, the Ember Sun.

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Zorhros is the third planet from Vharos — close enough to receive the star’s long copper light, but far enough to hold seasons, weather, hidden rivers, and life beneath its dust-choked surface. From space, it appears as a rugged world of red deserts, ridges, caverns, geothermal vents, and buried waterways.

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Three moons circle Zorhros. Together, the moons shape the tides of the hidden rivers, the old calendars, the festivals, and the night skies under which Kailum, Auren, and Tarak grow up.

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Moon 1

Three Moons Orbit Zorhros

Vesk, the dark moon, linked in stories with omens.
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