Location from The Mandalorian by Jon Favreau
Ruined homeworld of the Mandalorian people, devastated by Imperial orbital bombardment. The glass-bombed surface is a cursed wasteland, but the Living Waters endure in caverns far below.
Mandalore is a wound in the galaxy. The Great Purge reduced its surface to vitrified wasteland — the Empire's fusion bombs turned sand and stone to glass in a cataclysm the Mandalorians call the Night of a Thousand Tears. Walking the surface means crunching across crystallized ground that reflects a poisoned sky. Destroyed war machines and beskar-clad skeletons litter the ruins. The air is thin and tastes metallic. Yet below this desolation, the planet endures. The mines of Mandalore descend into vast cathedral-like caverns where the Living Waters pool in sacred darkness, and something ancient — a mythosaur — stirs in the deep. Mandalorians who return here feel the weight of their entire civilization pressing down from the ruined sky above.
The surface is a nightmare of fused glass and shattered cities. Dome structures that once housed millions lie collapsed, their transparisteel walls melted and rehardened into jagged formations. A sickly green-brown haze hangs in the atmosphere. Below ground, ancient mines open into vast caverns where bioluminescent fungi and underground rivers survive untouched.
Also known as: Manda'yaim