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{{trope}}
[[File:
▲{{quote|'''Aragorn''': Of course the woods are enchanted. They all are.<br />
'''Gimli''': Nature Boy is right. When was the last time anyone saw a regular, non-enchanted forest? You can't grow two trees next to each other without some wizard or demon coming along and enchanting them.|''[[DM of the Rings]]''}}
Besides your usual forest creatures, all manner of strange things lurk in the shadows. In any setting, it may be home to a [[Tree
Okay, the Lost Woods may not always be dangerous, but they're shadowy and creepy and only a [[Crazy Survivalist]] (or [[Nature Hero]] / [[Jungle Princess]]) would actually try to live in this place. Thus, they serve as a closer-to-home (for Europeans and North Americans, at least) version of [[Jungle Japes|the Jungle]]. (When very dangerous, may edge into [[Garden of Evil]].)
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May be a [[Shadowland]] for even [[Arcadia]], but even more likely for [[Shining City|a brilliant and happy city]].
As a setting for [[Video Game]] stages, The Lost Woods are a cousin to the [[Green Hill Zone]], and frequently occupy the second
Frequently a [[Genius Loci]], but it's not required. For a slightly more realistic setting, see [[Wild Wilderness]]. Compare [[The Hedge of Thorns]].
Named for the infamous [[Recurring Location]] in the ''Zelda'' games.
{{examples}}
== Anime ==
* [[
== [[Fairy Tales]] ==
* "[[
* In "[
* [[Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs (
* "[https://web.archive.org/web/20131214001257/http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/authors/grimms/3ourladyschild.html Our Lady's Child]" was abandoned in the forest for refusing to confess to having looked [[Forbidden Fruit|through the forbidden door]]; the king finds her there and falls in [[Love At First Sight]].
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20131129130936/http://www.surlalunefairytales.com/armlessmaiden/stories/onehandedgirl.html The One-handed Girl] hides from her brother in the forest; a prince finds her there and marries her. When her brother tracks her down and convinces the king and queen that she is a witch, she goes back; there she rescues a snake, gets back her hand, and receives a magical ring, with which she wins back her husband.
* In "[
* In "[[
* "Babes in the Wood". Sometimes combined with ''[[Robin Hood]]'' as a [[Pantomime]].
* The Estonian Folk tale "Wood of Tontla" features the titular Tontla Wood, a forest of tall, thick trees, inhabited by evil, man-eating spirits. In spite of the horror contained in it, the Wood is described as a "beautiful wood".
== Film ==
* ''[[Star Wars]]'' had Dagobah and Endor. Also Yavin 4 (the site of the Rebel Base in the first movie) though we don't see much of it, and Kashyyyk, which is so lush with vegetation that it manages to be this ''and'' [[Jungle Japes]].
* ''[[
* The Fire Swamp from ''[[The Princess Bride (
* ''[[The Brothers Grimm (
* That creepy forest from ''[[The Wizard of Oz (
* The woods through which Tristan travels in ''[[Stardust (
* The Appalachian woods in the first two ''[[Evil Dead]]'' movies. An ordinary forest under normal circumstances, once the [[Tome of Eldritch Lore|Book of the Dead]]'s been read aloud, it transforms into a twisted, fog-shrouded [[Genius Loci]] of [[When Trees Attack|living trees]], [[Mobile Maze|shifting paths]], and roaming, [[Demonic Possession|unseen spirits]]. The spell might have the same effect anywhere: the evil it awakens is said to lie dormant in "the forests and dark bowers of man's domain".
** Two sequel video games have different takes on what happens when the book's read in an urban environment. ''A Fistful of Boomstick'' portrays it as more or less a standard [[Zombie Apocalypse]], but ''Regeneration'' (a [[Continuity Reboot]] sequel) shows a wrecked city engulfed by mist and overrun with giant, living tree roots, as though it were in the process of changing into a Lost Wood.
* ''[[Avatar (
* The headless horseman's burial site in ''[[Sleepy Hollow (Film)|Sleepy Hollow]]'' is located in a creepy forest completely devoid of animal life.
* ''[[Raggedy Ann and Andy A Musical Adventure]]'' has the Deep, Deep Woods, which the dolls are warned to stay away from by Marcella. While at first it seems to be a normal forest, made spooky by the darkness of night, it ends up being the gateway to [[Eldritch Abomination|The Greedy]] and Loony Land.
* ''[[
* The Hinderlands in ''[[The Nightmare Before Christmas]]'' might possibly be this. Maybe.
* Where Lilli runs away to and meets the miners in ''[[Snow White:
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* In [[Norse Mythology]], Járnviðr (Jarnvidr), which means "Iron-wood", is a forest inhabited by giantesses and giant wolves. Norse heroic legend also has "Myrkviðr inn ókunna", "the unknown Mirkwood", a vast and little explored wood located somewhere in Eastern or Central Europe.
* In the legend of Genevieve of Brabant, she lived in the forest after escaping [[Malicious Slander]]. Fortunately, a magical deer helped her there.
* The above quote from DM of the rings was actually considered true by the Ancient Greeks. Forests (and mountains, valleys, or anywhere else where nature dominated the landscape) was considered to be "numinous": haunted by spirits and immortals.
** It also helped that there was a god, goddess, demi-god, nymph, maenid, sprite or other spiritual creature in charge of pretty much every natural feature from rivers to trees to small hills.
== Literature ==
* The Old Forest and Fangorn Forest from ''[[
* Garroting Deep, and the other remnants of the One Forest, in The [[Chronicles of Thomas Covenant]].
* Ratleaf Forest from ''Tailchaser's Song''. It's old, foreboding and '{{spoiler|The big bad sets up his fortress there.}}
** It's arguable that every Tad Williams book has an example.
* The books of Robert Holdstock's Mythago Cycle make heavy, heavy use of this trope. Ryhope Wood, the focus of the books, is a remnant of very ancient forest that [[Clap Your Hands If You Believe|brings to life]] figures from the collective unconscious. From the outside, it's a small wood that's nearly impossible to penetrate. From the inside, it's an [[Bigger
* Both the Deepwoods and the Twilight Woods from ''The Edge Chronicles'' are fitting examples of this trope.
* In [[Dan Abnett]]'s [[
** In ''Straight Silver'', the forests of Aexe Cardinal remind them of Tanith. They also contain a [[Oracular Urchin|mysterious woman]] who makes predictions to Gaunt and lends him a car that just vanishes (along with its keys) when it gets them where they are going.
* ''[[Discworld]]'' has Skund Forest, home of gnomes, witches and talking trees. There's also Cutshade Forest in "Troll Bridge", which Cohen the Barbarian calls "proper darksome" and full of giant spiders ... at least before it was sold to a lumber mill, chopped down and replanted with spruce.
* Harry Turtledove's ''Tales of the Fox'' series has the forest around Ikos, where strange things live, which has a mind (or mids) of its own, which doesn't necessarily care for people, and roads only exist at the forest's sufferance. It can also make unwanted travelers vanish in unexplained but silently ominous ways. It's implied that the forest exists to protect the Oracle of Ikos, placed by the all-seeing [[Physical God|god]] Biton.
* ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' has weirwood forests, especially those with a heart tree, due to their association with the children of the forest and the old gods. A more malevolent version would be the Haunted Forest beyond the Wall, due to the Others.
* In [[Chivalric Romance]], where the knights went on their [[
* A benevolent version is the setting of Zilpha Keatley Snyder's ''[[Green-Sky Trilogy]]''. The forest covers the entire world and is a friendly, nurturing place to the tree-dwelling Kindar people. The Erdlings, who have spent many generations trapped underground, eulogize the forest as a lost paradise, but the first Erdling to escape from the caverns experiences the forest as both lonely and threatening at first.
* The Forbidden Forest in [[Harry Potter]] is filled with [[Our Centaurs Are Different|centaurs]], unicorns, [[Giant Spider|giant spiders]], and other magical beasts to the point that students are punished by having to go in it at night.
* ''The Forests of Silence'', an example of this trope are a major plot point in the first book of the ''[[Deltora Quest]]'' book series; it's also the name of the first book.
* In [[Patricia
* In [[Robert E. Howard]]'s [[Conan the Barbarian]] story "[[Literature/B Beyond The Black River|B Beyond The Black River]]", the setting. With raiding Picts and a swamp demon.
* In [[Josepha Sherman]]'s ''[[The Shining Falcon]]'', the forest. Exactly how evil depends on whether the ''leshy'' like you.
* The eponymous protagonist of Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" is a [[The Colonial Period|colonial]] Puritain who ventures into these and learns [[Deal
* The ''[[Saga of Recluce]]'' has the Accursed Forest (later Naclos), a [[Starfish Alien|sort-of-sentient being]] whose massive [[Order Versus Chaos|Order and Chaos flows]] ties all of its animals and plants together into a single entity. While no more dangerous to simply pass through than any other forest, it fights back with deadly force against anyone attempting to tame, cultivate or cut it.
* The [[Enchanted Forest Chronicles]] take place in an unpredictable, but ''usually'' benign, enchanted forest. (At least, the later three do; ''Dealing with Dragons'' takes place in the Mountains of Morning, where the dragons live.)
* The Forest in ''[[
* [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[Stardust (
* The eponymous wood of [[Hexwood]] - either it's a small piece of wooded land near a housing estate where the local kids go to play (littered with crisp packets, and you can see through to the other side in places) or it's a vast forest containing a rushing river with waterfalls, caves, an Arthurian-style castle {{spoiler|and dragons}}. Or both. And that's not all that's going on, either.
* The Black Oaks in ''[[The Sword of Shannara]]''.
* [[
* [[Stephen King]]'s ''[[The Dark Tower]]'': ''[[The Dark Tower (Literature)/The Wind Through the Keyhole|The Dark Tower]]'' has "The Endless Forest".
* Mocked in ''[[Bored of the Rings]]'' by the [[wikipedia:Evelyn Wood (teacher)|Evelyn Wood]], a dark and dangerous forest which had once been a sunnier and more friendly demesne known as the [[Natalie Wood|Nattily Wood]] before being corrupted.
* ''Flamingo Feather'' by Laurens van der Post includes an area known as the Forest of Duk-aduk-duk. This sounds pretty silly to English speakers, but [[I Don't Like the Sound of That Place|the name refers to the sound of your heart pounding in terror because it's such a spooky place]].
== Music ==
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== Tabletop RPG ==
* ''[[Changeling: The
* ''[[
* [[Ravenloft]] has Lost Woods in spades. Much of the southeastern Core (the main landmass) is covered in thick, primeval forests. Notable areas include Verbrek (full of savage werewolves), Kartakass (full of intelligent wolves that hunt humans by shapeshifting into seductive human forms), and Tepest (where the goblins are the least of your worries compared to [[The Fair Folk]] and the hags).
* [[Legend of the Five Rings]] has the Shinomen Forest, which is almost completely unexplored and seemingly full of mysterious ruins that predate humanity. Legend holds that these were built by a race of snake-people who sleep within the forest. This turns out to be true, but is actually a good thing, as the snake-people are quite heroic.
* In [[Warhammer Fantasy Battle]], much of the Old World is covered by vast forests full of Beastman, Minotaurs, and worse things.
* Indie RPG ''Summerland'' has this as a central motif-the world has been spontaneously covered by a [[Spirit World|supernatural]] forest called the Sea of Leaves, inhabited by [[Intellectual Animal|sentient beasts]], eccentric hermits called the Lost, and [[Barbarian Tribe|savage Wild tribes]], who have forgotten they were once human. Those last two were normal people, but had their personalities overwritten by the [[Charm Person]] effect the Sea has on normal people (the Lost are treatable, the Wild are not). You play as a Drifter, a person immune to the call...[[Blessed
* Usually one fifth of every [[Magic:
* In [[GURPS]] ''Russia'' fantastic version presents the setting as an onion with a peasant's village in the middle and getting stranger as you go deeper in the forest.
== Theater ==
* The musical ''[[Into the Woods]]'', which is based on [[Fairy Tale|fairy tales]], is set it one of these forests.
* ''[[A Midsummer
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The Forest of Illusion in ''[[Super Mario World (
** World 2 in ''Super Mario World 2: [[
* Mushroom Hill Zone in ''[[Sonic 3 and Knuckles
** Green Forest and White Jungle in ''[[
** In ''[[Sonic the Hedgehog 2]]'' there was a level called Wood Zone that was removed late in development, some fan mods of the game include it.
* The Viridian Forest, Ilex Forest, Petalburg Woods, Eterna Forest, Pinwheel Forest, and Lostlorn Forest in ''[[Pokémon]]'', particularly the second, fourth, and sixth.
* Vine Valley in ''[[Donkey Kong Country]]'', Gloomy Gulch in ''[[Donkey Kong Country]] 2'' (which is [[Hailfire Peaks|also]] a [[Big Boo's Haunt]]), Kremwood Forest in ''[[Donkey Kong Country]] 3'', and Forest in ''[[Donkey Kong Country Returns]]''.
* Fungi Forest in ''[[
* Mazewood in ''[[Romancing
* Boggly Woods in ''[[Paper Mario:
** ''[[Paper Mario (
* Wood Man's stage in ''[[
** [[Mega Man 6|Tomahawk Man]]'s stage in ''[[Rockman 6: Unique Harassment]]'', Planting Domain, takes place in a lush forest. Mega Man starts off in the on top before descending into the darkness to face off against Doc Robot with [[Mega Man 9|Magma Man's]] powers. Afterwards, Mega Man has to climb back up to ground level, so he can face off against Tomahawk Man.
* Gaoracchia Forest from ''[[
** [[Tales
* World 1: Magic Forest from ''Superfrog''
* [http://kol.coldfront.net/thekolwiki/index.php/The_Distant_Woods The Distant Woods] from ''[[Kingdom of Loathing]]''.
* There are many of these in ''[[Final Fantasy]]'' games:
** ''[[
** ''[[
** Ancient Forest in ''[[
*** There's also the Sleeping Forest, which is integral to the plot, and cannot advance unless you have a magic harp in your possession.
** ''[[
** ''[[
** ''[[
*** The forest is implied to be made out of crystal which, somehow, is caused by the Fayth.
** Jugner Forest in ''[[
** ''[[
* Rainbow Butterfly Woods in ''[[
* The Black Forest [[Bonus Dungeon]] in ''[[Shadow Hearts]]: Covenant''. Listen to the flowers and you'll get through...but remember that you want to get ''out'' when you reach the last junction, [[Nonstandard Game Over|or you'll never get out again.]]
* Zelda:
** The [[Trope Namer]] is the Lost Woods from ''[[The Legend of Zelda (
** ''[[The Legend of Zelda:
** ''[[The Legend of Zelda:
** ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
** The Lost Woods are also present in ''[[The Legend of Zelda:
** The Forbidden Woods make up the second major dungeon in ''[[The Legend of Zelda:
** ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess
** ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks
** ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword
* ''[[
* [[World of Warcraft]] features a few of these, typically anywhere [[Our Elves Are Different|Night Elves]] make their abode. Ashenvale is the most prominent example, with the lighting always at essentially night-time levels and full of things like giant wolves and big, stompy four-story walking trees.
** Also present in a small part of the Blade's Edge Mountains where the night elves have set up their lone town (versus Cenarion Expedition outposts) in Outland, which they've terraformed into a small slice of
*** Terrokar ''Forest'' would perhaps be a better example.
** Duskwood qualifies as well.
** Northrend adds The Grizzly Hills and Howling Fjord.
* ''[[Lusternia]]'' has the Glomdoring forest (which in the tongue of [[The Fair Folk|the fae]] means "[[Names to Run Away From Really Fast|Forest Without Mercy]]"), populated by the prerequisite living trees, harpies, and ''angry sentient grass''. There's an underground commune consisting primarily of Drow-esque crossbreeds between [[Our Elves Are Better|Elves]] and [[The Fair Folk]].
* ''[[
** Well, both of the 'forests' are like a mix between forest and hill zone, with big open sunny skies and the general upbeatness. Gusty Garden seems more like a hill zone, too. At least it's not Evil Garden or some such.
** Tall Trunk Galaxy from [[Super Mario Galaxy 2
* Forest Maze from ''[[
* Several stratums in ''[[
* Wiese Forest (Chapter 3) in ''[[Riviera:
* ''[[
* ''[[
* ''[[
** Shadow Forest, like most of ''[[
** Gaea's Navel is far more remote and inaccessible, located on a plateau island with steep cliffs on all sides, complete with an unspoilt [[Lost World]] on top.
* Nearly ever ''[[World of Mana]]'' game has at least one of these, owing to the series' central environmental theme. The most pristine, ancient and undisturbed of these forests usually is home to the game's [[World Tree|Mana Tree]] plot device.
** ''Seiken Densetsu''/''[[Final Fantasy Adventure]]''/''[[Sword of Mana]]'' had the sacred land Illusia, located atop an unreachably high plateau and being home to the game's [[World Tree|Mana Tree]].
** ''Seiken Densetsu 2''/''[[Secret of Mana]]'' had ''several'' of these, with playable areas being small parts of bigass undeveloped forest land covering vast stretches of the world map. The [[World Tree|Mana Tree]]'s forest is located on the island of Pure Land, inaccessible from the water because of high cliffs, and inaccessible from the air because of dense clouds that never clear. With its deceptively peaceful zen-like music, Pure Land actually [[Everything Trying to Kill You|has some of the most difficult normal enemies in the game]].
** ''[[Seiken Densetsu 3]]'' had the Mana Holy Land, actually set apart from the main world map and occupying a separate space. It is home
*** The game also has a forest maze that hides a [[Hidden Elf Village]]; the correct trail is marked by glowing flowers at night.
*** And in Carlie/Kevin's routes, the final dungeon is hidden beyond the [[The Maze|Jungle of Illusion]].
** In ''[[Legend of Mana]]'', Vadise lives in such an ancient forest, and the first time you go through it, Larc sniffs out the correct direction. (In subsequent visits, you're on your own.)
** In ''[[Dawn of Mana]]'', the [[Hidden Elf Village]] on the Island of Illusia where Keldy grew up is in such a forest, and you discover that it, in turn, is sitting on the [[World Tree|Mana Tree]], which also happens to hold [[Sealed Evil in
* The unofficial remake of ''[[King's Quest II]]'' had a swamp like this, but not the original game.
* [[Neopets]] contains a browser-based RPG called Neo Quest II, and the fourth act of that game takes place in the Haunted Woods. The Haunted Woods are home to a [[Demonic Spider]] living in a cave, ''two'' [[Friendly Neighborhood Vampires]] living in (very) [[Haunted Castle|isolated]] [[Storming the Castle|castles]], a boss ([[Puzzle Boss|or bosses]]) that is widely considered to be the game's [[That One Boss]] right outside of a haunted house (and there's a [[World Tree]] of sorts nearby to boot), and an [[Eldritch Abomination]] living in a bog.
* The forest of Yoshpet in ''[[
* Perez Park in ''[[City of Heroes]]'' is an abandoned, overgrown, gang-infested city park that's a [[Scrappy Level]] for a number of reasons. One of which is that there's no reason to go there, thankfully. Villainside there's Nerva, and all forest areas in the game tend to be infested with the [[Path of Inspiration|Circle of Thorns]].
** While Croatoa isn't entirely covered in forest, it does fit the trope better with the perpetual night/twilight, fog, and various magical creatures running about. Then there is Eden, which has tree mazes filled with various mutant plant life, including trees that suddenly come to life.
* The [[Nasuverse]] features a monster forest named the Forest of Einnashe. Anything that wanders into its fifty-year cycle manifestation is swarmed from all directions by the forest and has its blood drained.
* Jade Cocoon takes place entirely in Lost Woods. Then the Dark World counterparts of said forests.
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** One of the dropped levels was Fungus Forest, which was put in Donkey Kong 64 instead as Fungi Forest. There's a framed photo in Banjo's house of Banjo standing in what is presumably Fungus Forest.
* The Living Forest from [[Mortal Kombat]]; it's a forest made up of trees with '''faces''' that frequently growl. Deceptions Konquest mode also implies that they may bleed red blood (as you can see some cut down trees with red stuff inside of them).
* ''[[
* The Dark Woods of the Serpent from ''[[Shadow Warrior]]''.
* ''[[Dragon Age]]: Origins'' has the Brecilian Forest, inhabited by many dangerous spirits due to being the site of an ancient massacre of elves by a human army. However, the player party will be sent in to deal with a werewolf problem.
* [[The Path]] takes place in one of these.
* Jolly Roger Island and Bowish Island from ''[[Dubloon]]'' consist mainly of forests.
* ''[[Brave Soul]]'' has a forest called the "Lost Woods" because people get lost in it easily. Unless they have a [[New Game
* Played straight in ''[[
* The second level of ''[[Bujingai Swordmaster]]''. Made all more interesting by the fact that it's actually a bamboo forest.
* ''[[
* ''Star Wars: [[Knights of the Old Republic]]'' has the Shadowlands of Kashyyyk (already mentioned under film above; also, probably not the [[Shadowland|trope]]), the dark and dangerous ground level beneath the homes of the wookiees on the trees.
* ''[[Wario World
* ''[[Cosmos Cosmic Adventure]]'' has a few levels set in forests, but the fourth level of episode 1 best exemplifies this trope, with its creepy-looking trees (with eyes looking out of them), ghosts, and thunderstorm.
* There are multiple sequences of traveling through a special zone of the forest in [[Brave Fencer Musashi]].
* LJN's [[The Problem
* Darkroot Garden and Basin in ''[[Dark Souls]]'', poorly-lit, surrounded by rock walls and long drops, and home to the [[Wild Hunt|Forest Hunters.]]
* The entirety of ''[[Magical Whip: Wizards of the Phantasmal Forest
* ''[[The Elder Scrolls]]'' series has a number of these scattered through its games. Go into a thick one with mist curling around the roots of the trees, half-light the only light to see by, and the odd sight of an Ayelid ruin peeking out of the trees, and you have a good example.
* ''[[Digimon World]]'' has the Misty Trees. Native Forest is really more of a [[Green Hill Zone]] or [[Ghibli Hills]].
* There are two in ''[[
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* The Skull valley in ''[[
* Gillitie Wood from ''[[
* ''[[No Rest for The Wicked (
* The characters in ''[[
* In ''[[
{{quote|
* ''[[Wooden Rose]]'' [http://www.woodenrosecomic.com/comic/chapter2/39.html The forest]
* ''[[Memoria (
* ''[[Bird Boy]]'':
** [https://web.archive.org/web/20110403051247/http://bird-boy.com/volume-1-page-3 The legendary hero was caught in the Liminal Wood] in the [[Backstory]].
** [https://web.archive.org/web/20110407090813/http://bird-boy.com/volume-1-page-13 And Bali goes into a summer forest while there's snow outside]
* ''[[Roza]]'' [http://www.junglestudio.com/roza/?date=2007-06-10 in search of a curse-breaker]
* In ''[[Thistil Mistil Kistil]]'', [http://tmkcomic.depleti.com/comic/ch02-pg12/ where he meets Loki]
* In ''[[Impure Blood]]'', where [https://web.archive.org/web/20130609070555/http://www.impurebloodwebcomic.com/Pages/Issue3/ib053.html Roan was growing up in one] before his capture.
* In ''[[Endstone]]'', [http://endstone.net/2010/06/28/4-01/ even Kyri finds some woods dark and foreboding].
* In ''[[Rusty and Co
* In ''[[
* In ''[[Doodze]]'', [http://seguemediagroup.com/doodze/?p=497 outside the gates.]{{Dead link}}
* In ''[[Tales of the Questor]]'', [https://web.archive.org/web/20130228043739/http://www.rhjunior.com/totq/00683.html the squire hopes to take refuge in one.]
* The Everwood Forest and the much larger Silverfronds Forest in ''[[
* In ''[[Erstwhile]]'', [https://web.archive.org/web/20130927202451/http://www.erstwhiletales.com/maidmaleen-10/#.T292otm6SuI Maid Maleen and her servant have to sleep in one.]
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* ''Neopets'' has the Haunted Woods.
** Post-[[Colony Drop]], Faerieland has become a non-dangerous example of this. We hope.
* The [[Noka|Tensian Forest]] north of Sterling is teeming with [[Hell Gate|gates]] that periodically allow anything from simple steam, to outright [[Eldritch Abomination
* [[One Hundred Yard Stare]]: Macy might have wandered into this in episode five.
== Western Animation ==
* The Everfree Forest in ''[[My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic
** To the ponies, the scariest thing about the Everfree Forest is that the plants grow, animals take care of themselves, and the clouds move -- ''all on their own!'' For those unfamiliar with the show, the ponies [[Painting the Frost
* The Unknown in ''[[Over the Garden Wall]]'' {{spoiler|AKA Purgatory}} mostly consists of this, along with the requisite bizarre inhabitants (Most notably [[Humanoid Abomination|The Beast]]
* ''[[The Amazing World of Gumball]]'' episode "The Picnic" has Gumball and Darwin getting lost in the Forest of Doom on a school picnic. [[Hilarity Ensues]].
== Real Life ==
* Probably the best example for the Japanese, [
* Anywhere that counts as part of the Boreal Forest, especially in Canada. A 10-minute drive out of your local Northern town, and you find yourself literally facing the same countryside that the first settlers had to deal with. Great for hiking and hunting. Can overlap with the [[Ghibli Hills]], especially in summertime.
** The Trans-Taiga Highway in Quebec is 362 miles of unpaved road through the taiga forests.
* Most parts of eastern and northern Russia. Especially the taiga.
* The Black Forest in southern Germany. Supposedly named because the tree covering is thick enough in some areas to kill all light.
* Finland. As the Russians found out, the inhabitants not only included more than one [[Big Badass Wolf]], more to the point, a [[Finns With Fearsome Forests|more dangerous]] type of [[Cold Sniper|predator]].
** Though most of these woods have been rather tame industrial forest for nearly a century. Wood was Finland's main export followed by paper, until consumer electronics were invented. But in the dead of winter it doesn't make much difference.
* Even in an area like the Blue Ridge Mountains, with civilization relatively close by, it's deceptively easy to get lost if you're dumb enough to start wandering off the trail.
* The Amazon Rainforest. Go in without a guide (preferrably a [[Our Elves Are Better|native]]) and it's a fair guess you won't make it out.
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* We could probably list the entirety of southern New Jersey, with the exception of Atlantic City. Driving down the pine barrens roads at night can easily give you the impression that you're somewhere in [[Lovecraft Country]].
** The pines have ''reclaimed'' several small towns. Wander through the wrong section of the barrens, and you might find bits and pieces of what used to be houses...
* The immense woods around the Great Lakes region used to be a scene of bloody wars and massacres with raiding parties going to and fro looking for trouble(Iroquois slang called it ''The Great Warpath''). If you believe in ghosts this is a good place to put them, and once upon a time supernatural threats weren't the only ones.
* Any reasonably thick forests can be made out as that with some imagination. The play of firelight, moonlight and the shadows of trees can allow you to very easily pretend there are Strange Things there.
*Not to mention that even in well governed areas, nature can take a turn for the worse, or a hunter might [[Unfriendly Fire|mistake you for a deer]] or what not.
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Settings]]
[[Category:Mario Plush Forever]]▼
[[Category:Fairy Tale Tropes]]
[[Category:Video Game Settings]]
[[Category:The Lost Woods]]
[[Category:
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lost Woods, The}}
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