
A now-defunct theme park located on the south shore of the bay, near the southern City limits. It was originally designed around an "international" themes, with different areas of the park representing various exotic cultures around the world.
Since its opening in 1960, Farther Shores was was a popular attraction for residents and tourists alike. A freak accident in 1988, however, put a damper on its popularity. A teenager riding on the newly installed "Mortal Coil" roller coaster was decapitated due to a faulty restraint harness. At the same time, the ride's ermergency shut-down system failed, forcing the other riders to complete three more laps on the "thriller coaster" soaked in the boy's arterial blood. The boy's mother, who was sitting in the seat next to him when he was killed, spent several months in a catatonic state. She later took to stalking the park grounds at night, and was eventually found guilty of the grisly murders of four teenaged park employees.
After the mother's trial in 1990, Farther Shores closed its doors. The rides and structures were left to rot. The property property was later purchased by Lamont Christensen, and is still owned by him through several intermediary companies.
More recently, the ruined park was inhabited by the Milton Brothers and their all-ghost street gang, the Blasphemers, who used it as a headquarters and main supply depot for pigment trade in the city. Following the dissolution of Darryl Milton's ghost, Emmet Milton retreated with the rest of his supplies and followers into the park's House of Mirrors, at which point something caused the entire structure to vanish. There remains only a deep, dark crack visible only in the ghost-world, and a strange rippling motion where the mirror house once stood.