Rutaani Sporepod
Rutaani Sporepod sits on the table with a quiet arrogance, a velvet-dark capsule the size of a cantaloupe resting in a net of twined fibers. Its skin is quilted, each segment a tiny shield of green-black rind stitched with pale, vein-thin lines that glow softly as dusk settles. When you tilt it, the pod breathes a sigh of humidity and a faint, mossy sweetness curls up your nose, as if an entire forest leaned in to listen. The inside is a cascade of amber beaded spores held in suspended, glimmering syrup—the kind you can feel more than see, a living little weather system pressed into nine or ten inches of organic glass. It’s oddly heavy, the weight of memory and rain. The Rutaani Sporepod is no mere curiosities case-bound in a display crate. Local lore says the Rutaani once walked the lowland wilds as guardians of seed and soil, their spores a language—tiny ships that carry guidance from plant to plant and memory from season to season. To those who know how to read it, the pod is a map and a seed in one: crack it open and the spores drift out like a whispering swarm, seeking a receptive patch of earth or a willing host plant. The elders tell of forests waking at their scent, of roots blinking in the dark as helpful spores find their way into the root hairs of a fern or a sapling. If you listen closely, you can hear a soft, almost-giggling rustle as the spores decide where to settle. In practice, the Sporepod is a keystone in field alchemy and survival. The spores act as a catalyst for potency—warp a tincture with a single pinch, and it blooms into a restorative draught that accelerates healing and proves surprisingly resilient against fungal contaminants. Brewed as a fog, the spores create a living veil: for a short while, you can blend with the forest’s undergrowth, your silhouette folding into moss and brush. They also serve as a quiet beacon for trackers and for those who work with the land’s pulse, guiding hands that know how to coax a plant’s life back into vigorous growth. In the larger story of the wilds, the Sporepod is a reminder that life clings stubbornly to the margins, turning decay into chance and chance into route forward. Pricing feels like a weather system, shifting with the market’s mood and the night’s tide. I watched a trader cradle a crate of Rutaani Sporepods, listening to the soft sigh of the spores as if they were a crowd murmuring about the day’s luck. We found them at the Saddlebag Exchange, where caravans swap tales and trinkets as much as goods. The vendor’s fingers spoke of a fair trade: a mix of rare hides, a handful of night-berries, and a small coin purse that didn’t require a sword to open. The negotiation swayed in favor of patience, and the pods found a new traveler who promised to let their glow guide him through damp brush and moonlit marches. It’s a fragile bargain, this life with a Sporepod—the kind that feels like a pact with the land itself, sealed not in gold, but in the quiet, hopeful breath of the forests.
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Minimum Price
0
Historic Price
3,500.75
Current Market Value
0
Historic Market Value
350
Sales Per Day
0.1
Percent Change
-100%
Current Quantity
0
