Germany was famous for it's gloomy weather. Large and imposing storm clouds created a low rumble of thunder, filling up the late afternoon sky as the various cacophony of birds, more specifically a murder of crows, drowned the area in an atmosphere of eerie tension. The forests of Germany were famous for being extremely dense, dark, and creepy, but no forest in Northeastern was more famous for having such a dark atmosphere but the Od Lotua Forest located not far from Berlin. Thirty miles west of Berlin, just inside the borders of Brandenburg, the Od Lotua Forest takes that reputation into uncanny territory. Here the canopy grows so dense that on overcast days the woodland floor lies in perpetual twilight, dappled only by stray shafts of grey light. Ancient oaks twist their limbs into grotesque shapes, while younger birches and silver firs push up through the undergrowth in desperate competition for the scant sunlight. People avoid this forest like the plague: tales of monsters, sightings of dead family members, occult rituals, satanism, nude rituals, and sex cults stroke fear into the hearts of many Germans. Thrill-seeking college students often send freshmen into this forest as a sort of test of resolve, and to get a good scare out of them. This forest, and any land around it, seems like a place no one would live in. And still yet... Still yet, an old, worn down path granted passageway through the cold and haunting forest, as if beckoning any curious individual to walk it's path. If one does succumb to their mortal desire and walk