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Season of the Bonehunter



More than a hundred gifts for every Sphere player! The bravest, wisest and noblest warriors of the Sphere are invited to participate in the season of the bonehunter!

🔹What season is this?🔹

Essentially, this is a set of tasks, for which participation is given progress points. As you accumulate progress points, you will receive sets of useful and sometimes even unique rewards!

🔹Tell us more about the prizes!🔹

❄️The title "Bonehunter" - increases the chance of items dropping from monsters and the amount of crafting materials picked up by 3%.
❄️Infusion of Windfury - increases attack, spell and movement speed by 5% for 24 hours
❄️Loot collector “Tamed Peregrine Falcon” - moves 60% faster than usual, lasts 30 days.
❄️Groom Token - used to improve the groom’s mount.
❄️Pet "Hunting Peregrine Falcon" Its properties are below.
◻️ crusher
◻️ skill
◻️ Level 10 - Exceptional Agility (Increases the owner's agility by 1.6%) OR Exceptional Wisdom (Increases the owner's wisdom by 1.6%)
◻️level 20 - Light Step (Increases the wearer's movement speed by 10%) OR Tireless (Increases the speed of movement, attack and casting spells by 6%.)
◻️ Level 30 - Exceptional Agility (Increases the owner's agility by 1.6%) OR Exceptional Wisdom (Increases the owner's wisdom by 1.6%)
◻️ Level 40 - Great Flame of the Warrior (Increases the owner's movement and attack speed by 7.5%) OR Great Flame of the Wizard (Increases the speed of movement and use of abilities of the owner by 7.5%)
◻️ Level 50 - Exceptional Agility (Increases the owner's agility by 1.6%) OR Exceptional Wisdom (Increases the owner's wisdom by 1.6%)
◻️ level 60 - Sky Shroud (Reduces damage received by the owner and allies within a radius of 12 meters by 4.5%) OR Aerial Feints (After receiving damage with a 9% chance, reduces all damage taken by 3.5% and increases movement speed by 6.5% for 12 seconds. Triggers no more than once every 5 seconds. Stacks up to 4 times.)

❄️In addition to all this, you can get food, conservation crystals, a refining master’s hammer, essences, ghost coins, spices and much, much more. The full set of rewards is available to those who purchase the Advanced Pass.

❄️You can buy a Bonehunter Helmet and a Hunting Bow from Battle Pass goods merchants for Ghost Coins.

🔹I'm in! How to participate?🔹

When you first enter the game after the start of the battle season, each of your characters will see an invitation window.

Click the “Start Season” button to join. After this, you can open the season window by clicking on the icon located next to the mini-map.

🔹What needs to be done?🔹

Open the season window. In it you will see a list of tasks. Tasks are divided into those that you can complete once per season, and daily. One-time tasks are chained (complete the current task to start the next one). However, each group of tasks is available at the same time - as you complete simple tasks, new, more complex ones will open up.

🔹I want more rewards and tasks!🔹

Easily! To have access to more tasks and receive more rewards for progress points, you can purchase an extended pass. In addition to these benefits, the pass will also allow you to gain combat experience (progress points) faster. The Extended Pass is purchased once for the entire season and is valid for your entire account. You can become the owner of an extended pass and claim your rewards at any time during the season.

🔹Can I get rewards right now?🔹

If the romance of completing tasks every day bores you, then of course! To speed up the season and gain instant access to rewards, you can purchase levels (a fixed number of progression points).

The season lasts 28 days and contains 100 levels of progress!
Receive maximum gifts!

We wish you good luck in the new season!

Legend of the hunting bow



Every hunter needs a bow. Northerners think so. A real hunter is like a frosty snake - he lurks for a long time, and then strikes for sure. And if the game is large and fast, he chases it until it is exhausted, and then stings with one sure attack. After all, there is no one more dangerous than a hunted animal; it does not forgive mistakes.

Bone miners believe that a hunter needs only a bow and a knife for his craft. They despise traps, snares and wolf pits. The last ones especially. Hunting is always a one-on-one duel. Otherwise there will be no honor in the hunt. And northern hunters put their honor above all else.

For a hunter, a bow is not only a tool of his craft, it is his faithful friend and adviser who will never betray and will always lend a shoulder. Northerners make bows from brown snow birch - brittle and capricious wood. They don’t make houses out of it - after all, the roof will tend to collapse on the head of the unlucky builder. And in general, brown birch is only suitable for firewood. If you don't know how to talk to her.

First you need to find a special tree - not straight and slender, but twisted into three deaths, buried by an avalanche and resurrected in the spring. The future bow should be guessed in the tree trunk itself, in its knots, cracks and bends. When you have found a suitable birch tree, you should ask its will to become a friend to the hunter, and after the answer, if it, of course, agrees, cut it at the root, and fill the roots with pitch - each onion should have roots immersed in the frozen soil of the northern wastelands.

Then a bow is turned from a single trunk so that its body consists of a twisted and knotted core. The workpiece is then wrapped in cloth soaked in fat and honey from killer bees, as well as sprinkled with fresh thawed earth and the ashes of a sacrificial fire, and then buried five spans into the ground and left for a whole year. After this, the onions are dug up, peeled, polished and smoked over low heat. And then they wrap it again in greased cloth and bury it in the ground again until spring, and only then take it out and put a bowstring on it. Such a bow will never break in the hands of a hunter, will not fail and will never send an arrow past the target.

The string for a hunting bow is woven from wolf hair, women's hair and birch bark. This unites the three worlds that the northerners believe in - the world of the living, the world of animals and the earth, which many consider the world of the dead. Such a bowstring will never break and will never hit the hunter’s hand. Unless he points his bow at the defenseless.

The northerners believe in this, and invariably follow the traditions of making their bows. Scientific minds have long proven that it is impossible to make weapons from brown birch, however, all the samples that they were able to obtain from a tribe of bone hunters showed that they are in no way inferior in strength and strength to modern compound bows, and in accuracy and speed of arrow flight are far superior to them. However, when tested in battle, these bows instantly broke, and their fragments crumbled to dust before the arrow flew off the string.

A northern hunter would say that a bow is needed for hunting, not for battle, that they kill with it only out of necessity, and not for the sake of anything else, that honest hunting is the only way. But who will seriously listen to northern hunters who believe in fairy tales and make bows from brown birch?
Decide for yourself who to believe. But this hunting bow, made of brown birch, in an embroidered quiver with a dozen arrows feathered with peregrine falcon feathers is yours. Who knows, maybe he will bring you luck in your hunt. I believe in it.

The Legend of the Hunting Peregrine Falcon



They say that a true hunter must have the eye of a falcon. And how else can a hunter see his prey and shoot a sure arrow right into its heart! Many people say so, but northerners sincerely believe it.

After the hunter has proven his skill and tenacity in pursuit of the pioneer of the wasteland, he sets off for the snowy mountains on the coast of the marginal sea. Yes, yes, the north only seems flat - in fact, there are many mountain ranges there, one higher than the other! And somewhere there, high in the mountains, live true hunters, whose skill others can only strive for, but will never achieve it. And the young bone hunter must overcome deep gorges, terrible glaciers and frozen cliffs to reach the sharp peaks on which peregrine falcons build their nests.

Peregrine falcons are small birds, inconspicuous and inconspicuous. And this is their strength: they are impossible to see against the background of gray rocks and gray ice as they circle in the sky above an unsuspecting victim. Peregrine falcons wait until the prey is at one point known to them, and then fold their wings and fly down. They rush towards the victim like lightning, and the air behind them collapses - as if thunder thunders from a clear sky. And no one can escape their blow.

It is for the peregrine falcon eggs that bone hunters go to the mountains. They carefully hide a single egg in their bosom, leave a piece of raw meat in the nest, and then go down to their village. They must carry this egg through all the dangers, without damaging or breaking it, and then keep it warm until the chick hatches. They then feed and raise the peregrine falcon, who recognizes them as his parents.

A hunter who manages to catch a peregrine falcon is considered a master of his craft. His eyes no longer know fatigue, his hand never misses. A bird circling in the sky above him allows him to see the world with his own eyes. And his arrow will always hit the target, like the claws of a northern falcon, falling down like lightning. Northerners believe this.

Who knows, maybe the eyes of true bone hunters are really like those of a bird? We can only guess, looking at their helmets with bone masks that reliably hide their faces from the evil wind. And from curious glances.

Bonehunter Helm



The north is harsh and merciless, and proof of this is the harsh snowstorms driving ice chips along the coast of the marginal sea. These winds tear clothes, cut flesh like a whip and blind the unwary who did not have time to cover his eyes with his hand.

There is also the sun - scorching, scorching, but at the same time cold. It doesn't heat, but it burns. Reflected in the eternal ice, it blinds anyone who dares to peer into the distance for too long and too intently.

But a hunter needs a keen eye!

In order to protect the face and eyes from the terrible northern winds and the scorching cold fire of the sun, the helmets of bone hunters appeared. Tanned leather reliably protects against razor-sharp floes of ice rushing over the ground, and bone masks with narrow slits shade the eyes and save them from blindness.

Another distinctive feature of these helmets are the trophy tusks that hunters attach to their temples. The luckier the hunter, the bolder and more agile he is, the more tusks on his helmet. They have, however, another purpose. An experienced hunter can hear his prey from many miles away by placing his ear to the ground, and the tusks enhance the hunter's hearing many times over.

Many helmets have a broken right tusk, and there is an explanation for this. First, after the hunter receives his first helmet, he must traditionally go to the mountains, find the ice mouflon, this pioneer of the wastelands, and fight him in fair combat. Often the tusks on the helmet break, and if this happens, the hunter is recognized by his tribe. Especially if he brings mouflon horns to the village. And secondly, the right tusk is often deliberately ground down so that it does not interfere with archery. So it turns out that experienced bone miners have a broken tusk attached to their helmet, and when talking, they invariably stand half-turned towards the interlocutor - and always with their left ear towards him.

However, despite the difficulty in making and even some sacred meaning of their helmets, the northerners do not consider them something special. It's just a necessary tool in their craft. In addition, artisans always make helmets with a supply, and there are always enough daredevils ready to fight a mouflon in the icy wastelands. So the extra helmets, no, no, and end up on the markets of the southern lands. In the south there is no need to hide your eyes behind a bone mask and break through the snow with your tusk in order to reach the ground and hear your prey, but fashion is fashion. And there is always a demand for exotic things.
Try on this bonehunter helmet, my dear customer! I'm telling you for sure, it suits you! Don't hesitate to take it. At the very least, you will tell your grandchildren tales about how you collided with the pioneer of the wasteland and walked away victorious! I'm sure they will be delighted!

The story of the Snow Wolf



Anyone who has ever heard a wolf howl under a full moon will tell you that their blood ran cold from this drawn-out, melancholy music that reverberated off the cold rocks and penetrated right under the skin.

Many people, and some demons, are afraid of wolves, considering them ruthless predators who will not fail to surround a lone wanderer and tear him to shreds. But there are few who have actually encountered wolves. They will most likely tell you that if you are afraid of wolves, do not go into the forest, and that gray predators will most likely run away at the sight of a terrible two-legged monster. Especially if this monster suddenly has a longer stick in his hands. However, wolves are different from wolves.

Among the northerners there are dark legends about huge and fierce snow wolves. They appear only at night, come along with a blizzard, and the next morning they disappear without a trace. Except for the traces of the bones of their victims. Legends say that snow wolves are huge, fearless and ferocious, and their eyes glow with an otherworldly yellow fire in the darkness of the night. Seeing a snowy samum in the distance, the northerners close the shutters and turn off the lights in order to ward off trouble and not attract snow wolves. However, legends are only meant to be exaggerated. One way or another, there are no real eyewitnesses of an attack by snow wolves. For natural reasons, one must think...

However, sometimes you can meet rare bone hunters on your way. This small tribe lives farthest in the north, on the coast of the eternally frozen sea. They don't like to talk about themselves, but others talk a lot about them. They say that hunters travel across the ice that compresses the outlying waters, and track down unprecedented creatures that have no name. Some people think that these are nimble snow leopards, others that they are gigantic hairy elephants with tusks capable of breaking centuries-old ice floes, although it is clear to the ignorant that there are no hairy or fanged elephants in the world, and some even say about ice dragons. But who the rare bone miners actually hunt remains a mystery, while the bone itself is regularly supplied to the markets of the southern lands.

One thing is certain about these hunters - they invariably travel on the backs of huge wolves with yellow eyes. Such a wolf can run non-stop for days on end, chasing down prey. And the more wolves in the pack, the more coordinated and quickly they overtake the target. These wolves do not know fatigue, they are unfamiliar with pity, and they do not recognize anyone except their rider. Some believe that these are the legendary snow predators, tamed by hunters, while others do not believe this. But everyone unanimously agrees with the name that the hunters themselves call their animals - tireless pursuers.

Sometimes, in a good year for adventurers, bone hunters bring with them the puppies of their tireless pursuers to auction and sell them to the heroes. If you are lucky enough to get such an animal, and have the patience to feed and raise it, then know that it will become your devoted friend and will rush you through any obstacles towards your goal.

The main thing is not to put your hands in his mouth, and make sure that he looks less into the forest. Just in case. It certainly won't be superfluous.