

Vincardio Tribe.
This is a brand new piece of information on the backstates that's currently a work in progress.
Said information regards the existence of a Native American Tribe called the Vincardio that has existed within the Hispanic South since 12,400 BC and is now exclusive to Bestings due to native relocation policies implemented in the neighboring states.
The first image shows the true scale of the Vincardio People's territory at its peak around the 1700s, covering virtually all of South Bestings, much of Southern Granter, a huge chunk of Northeastern New Madrid, a large portion of Las Farodas, and even tiny portions of Trimeda and Nacird.
The second image is a latinized version of the Vincardio Alphabet, containing some sounds that are so incomprehensibly complex that they are not found in any region of the Frontspace World (what the general public consider Earth). Two examples of this complexity are the three and four-humped Ms.
Here's how to pronounce those.
First, start with the voiced alveolar nasal [n] and turn it into a uvular by pushing the back of your tongue against the roof of your mouth and the front against the floor. You should wind up with [ɴ]. The next step is to velarize the consonant by vibrating the back of your tongue along the roof of your mouth. This should give you [ɴˠ]. Then, you project even more nasal release and also exhale while making the specified sound. Applying said transformations should get you [ɴ̃ˠ] and then [ɴ̤̃ˠ]. Then, raise your entire tongue onto the roof of your mouth. This should get you [ɴ̤̝̃ˠ]. Already nearly impossible, isn't it? Well, we're not done here. Now, you have to labialize the consonant, meaning you need to round your lips whilst completing every preceding step. Now, the sound that exits your mouth should be [ɴ̤̝̃ˠʷ]. That is the standard realization of the Vincardio three-humped M. To get the four-humped M, all you need to do is pharyngealize the consanant. Basically, you need to constrict your throat while completing all of the preceding steps. Putting all of that together, you should get the following sound: [ɴ̤̝̃ˤˠʷ]
Also, the word order for the Vincardio language is as follows:
Subject, Verb, Object, Verb, Subject, Object, Verb, Object, Subject, Verb, Subject, Object.
Need an example as to what that suggests?
In English, we say the following: "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog."
With the Vincardio word order, however, the sentence would be more like the following:
"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog jumps over the quick brown fox the lazy dog jumps over the lazy dog the quick brown fox jumps over the quick brown fox the lazy dog."
Don't ask why that's the case. It just is.