seen from China
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Yemen
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from Mexico

seen from Sweden
seen from Poland

seen from Malaysia

seen from Brunei
seen from United Kingdom
run to the left!
{[LEAVE]: [Overgrown Hidden Copse]
You bid Yvil farewell and head back towards the main road. You are not sure what help you could offer the bard on their musical vigil.
Once you are out of sight, Eiona speaks up.
You noticed they were very curious about Yvil, and hung on every word they said. Cal shares your confusion and asks Eiona to clarify.
You make a mental note to ask Cal about the names of this worlds countries the next time you have time.
Apparently, the [Leifel] and [Growth Mages] come from across the sea. You have seen a few maps but you never really thought about how big the world truly is.
Gestalt has a good point, Yvil knew a lot about the [Yellow Hunger] maybe they came here specifically to help.
Either way it was nice to meet the bard, and you are ready to continue onto [Yexxies Harbor]
The [LEFT] path leads back to the [Daffodil Farms 2]The [RIGHT] path leads deeper into the [Daffodil Fields]The [INWARD] path leads into the [Overgrown Daffodil Copse]
[STATUS][QUESTS][MAP]
What should we do now?
pg 602 question 28. learned that of is prepositional phrase so shouldn't quality be the subject and not tablets?
This is a tricky one. The subject of the verb in is determined is quality, like you say. But the antecedent of the pronoun its is not the quality, but the tablets. You wouldn't talk about the potency of quality--tablets are the things that can be potent.
The takeaway is that while you won't find the subject of a verb in a prepositional phrase, you might very well find the antecedent of a pronoun. This is why I don't like the advice I sometimes hear tutors give about crossing out prepositional phrases. Sometimes, important stuff can be hiding in there! On the hardest writing questions, you can get caught napping if you ignore the contents of prepositional phrases.
[Want a little more last-minute writing advice?]