Tropicland is a ring-shaped archipelago found in the far eastern waters of the world.
Tropicland receives sunlight through the whole year, specially during the mornings. The air can reach temperatures of 45ºC at most, but tends to be a milder 28ºC.
The archipelago is shaped like a ring, and a bowl-like depression is in the center of its waters. The islands are often sandy but many have basalt growths from volcanic activity and the larger ones also have rainforests.
Tropiclander flora is characterized by diversity. On sea, it is possible to find algae and corals of all kinds growing besides charnia and sponges. The Cube Reef is a large coralline structure that exists through most of the Tropiclander shallows and is rich in such plants.
On land, grasses and bromeliads are common. Coconut trees are found in most beaches while tropical araucarias are present more inland. The later form forests along with cycads and a variety of bushes and flowers. Vanillaceans are very common. The largest forests in the Tropicland are composed by many tall fructifer, conifer and nozifer trees. Ferns and carnivorous plants rid the floor and feed small creatures.
The depths of the Tropiclander sea have animals such as anglerfish, small piscines, nautili, crustaceans and all kinds of deep-sea asterans. They feed mainly on sea snow or amongst themselves.
The Cube Reef is an extremelly productive ecosystem. It houses one of the largest diversity of fish of all kinds. Piscines and aquequines are by far the most common, but spathiines, bollines, angullines, piscilacertines, quasilacertines and rajiines are extremelly important, ecologically.
Molluscs such as nautili and ammonites thrive as they feed on shrimp. Squid are also prevalent, as are planiines and laceines. Hammerhead sharks are some of the most important predators, although the apex is actually an avian, the spinosaurus. Other important predators are dolphins and aereal birds such as gulls and pelicans. Pterosaurs like thalassodromeus are also important.
An animal that is native yet domesticated is the aspidochelone, also known as ferrurtle. It is used by locals as a common method of locomotion, as it has no natural predators.
Some humpback whales periodically migrate to the Cube Reef to spawn.
On land, saurs of many kinds can be found. Megafaunal, herbivore ones are diplodocus, triceratops, parasaurolophus, olorotitan, miragaia and the introduced stegosaurus and argentinosaurus. The largest land carnivore is also a saur, the purussaurus. Smaller saurs include psittacosaurus.
Crabs often venture inland, where they are prey to the various raptorines like ubirajara and sinosauropteryx. Seagulls and pelicans are still common, as are their more terrestrial cousins the parrots, the toucans and the woodpeckers.
Reptiles are prevalent too. In the forests, frogs and lizards like drepanosaurus, tegu and sharovipteryx are very common. They are even prey to the large tupandactylus, one of the largest predators in the archipelago. Smaller cousins of this pterosaur, like anurognathus, pterodactylus and eudimorphodon are prevalent too. The forests are also noted for their extremelly large beetles and dragonflies, which can reach up to 6 kilos and 1 metre of wingspan, respectively.