QUOTE(mirocu @ Sep 11 2015, 08:31 AM)

QUOTE(Renee @ Sep 11 2015, 01:42 AM)

We get some pretty weird mushrooms in Maryland, and I mean, they'll just sprout on our lawn sometimes, literally overnight. Some of them look like yellow or red cinnabar, but I don't know officially what these guys are called. I'll have to get some pics next time they crop up, IF they do.
Sounds like the ones we get in our lawn at the cottage too. Last fall I had immense fun shooting at them with my automatic airsoft AK-47 and Ingram

I too live in a pretty fungal area (southern Hampshire) and I'm still learning to identify some of the weird stuff out there. (And it's just coming into mushroom season now, got to get out there.) The one obvious Oblivion one we have around here - I know a big patch of them - is 'fly amanita', but I've never heard it called that in RL, it's either
amanita muscaria (same thing in Latin) or more usually 'fly agaric'. Not quite as fearsome as its reputation would have, takes about 20-30 for a lethal dose, whereas Death Caps (which I was thinking of putting into Oblivion, I have a suitable mod to add them to) can kill on half a cap. And you'll likely need a liver transplant if you do survive.
But I've picked up on two abundant edible species, puffballs (which I know from childhood, very fine fried in butter with a bit of black pepper) and parasols, I think the only ones I've found of those were a bit old, I wasn't impressed. Need to find some chanterelles. And I too find odd species popping up on the lawn too that weren't there before. Was puzzling, but now I reckon it's because I've been tracking the spores home on my boots from country walks.
Anyway, I did look up the Oblivion species a way back, IIRC most are clearly also real, but often they've been messing with the names. Here is a UK piece on Cinnabar Polypore, though:
Pycnoporus cinnabarinusIt's sad, because it's rare and may even be extinct in the UK. I'd be made up if I saw one. But you're more likely to, Renee, link from the US:
Pycnoporus cinnabarinusSays it can be rare (Illinois) but is widespread. Wouldn't be on the lawn, though, come to think of it, it's a bracket fungus.
Funny, being prompted to do fungal research by a computer game...