JUMP TO MONTHLY PROMPT ↓
A TRAIN COMES INTO THE STATION.
You wake up on a train.
Your phone is buzzing. It's in your pocket, in your hand, on the seat next to you. It's a normal phone, and you're on a normal train car. One of the lights flickers, a little further down. The world is very quiet. It feels like you're right where you're meant to be. On the phone's surface is a white screen and the words—
WELCOME TO THE CITY. BEGIN ORIENTATION?
▶ NO
Please take a moment to complete your orientation.
Once you're finished, the subway doors slide open to let you out onto the train platform. To your right, the platform continues on and eventually ends; to the left is a set of stairs that will lead you up into the station itself. The platform is quiet, clean, empty—there's no one else around, and the only sounds you can hear are your own footsteps, your own breaths, and the occasional faraway sound of a creaking pipe or rush of air. The train you disembarked will stay there as long as you do, its doors still open, until you finally decide to venture up into this new locale.
As you make your way up the stairs to your left, you find yourself in the belly of City Hall station. The station is large, a sprawling underground mini-metropolis of corridors and storefronts. Here, you may find others like you, freshly-arrived city residents from other realms (or even your own). There is also a subway map, which will give you an idea of the layout of the neighborhood, and ticketing machines, which can currently only be used to buy tickets to a handful of stations located on lines 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 9.
If you're hungry or in need of any kind of supplies, there are plenty of storefronts inside the subway station as well—snack stands, convenience stores, restaurants, clothing stores, a pharmacy, and a variety of empty shops that may or may not have ever been in use. Everything is unlocked, and you can take whatever you need.
Characters may stay on the train platform indefinitely, and may re-board and re-disembark from the subway as many times as they like, but the train will not depart nor will the doors close. Once they go up the stairs into the train station, they may hear the train doors closing and the train departing. Another train will not arrive, no matter how long the character waits. Only once they come up the stairs into the station itself may characters encounter their fellow newly-arrived residents and take advantage of what the city has to offer.
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WELCOME TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD.
The station is located in the city center. It has three major exits that lead to areas of interest in the district, but there are several other smaller exits that lead in other directions around the neighborhood. You are welcome to use any of them, but may find the north, southwest, and east exits to be the most welcoming.
TO THE NORTH
The northern entrance to the station leads up into the sunlight and puts you out in a brickwork plaza. There's a modest building in front of you, three or four stories of stone with a welcoming facade. There's a sign above the entryway—it says City Hall. You may be tempted to explore, if you're interested in learning more about the city and how it functions, but prepare to find yourself disappointed—the folders in the records rooms are full of empty, blank sheets of paper, and the logbooks and balance sheets are similarly devoid of information.
Immediately to the southwest of City Hall, you will find a small building that houses the tourist information center. It looks welcoming, with an inviting glass facade and a sign above the entryway announcing it as the "TOURIST CENTER." It's a humble building with a receptionist's desk on the back wall opposite the entrance, empty magazine shelves lining the side walls, and a few spinning brochure racks full of blank pamphlets. Anyone is welcome to peruse the tourist literature, though they won't offer much information, being primarily filled with pictures of the surrounding area—City Hall, the park, a statue garden, and the surprisingly heavily-featured cemetery. There are a few sentences sprinkled throughout about basic offerings of the city, such as apartment complexes and office buildings, as well as a few maps with the same limited scope as the larger version on the wall behind the receptionist's desk.
TO THE SOUTHWEST
The western exit of the station takes you up into a city park, lush and green with a very light fog still hanging about the trees. There are lampposts on the walkways and benches where you could rest, and plenty of flora, although you can neither see nor hear any signs of animal life. You walk the paths that meander idly through the verdant grass and you feel a sense of peace, some of your unease about this place easing into a pleasant calm. The air smells fresh, like it's recently rained, and you'll find the grass ever so slightly damp should you decide to take a seat.
As you make your way deeper into the park, the trees grow denser and the smell of soil and plant life grows stronger. This is the older part of the park, very nearly a forest, with ivy climbing the trunks of the trees and plants and shrubs growing riotously around their bases. As you turn a corner, you find yourself first in the statue garden, although the statues are harder to see now, choked as they are with ivy. There are many statues, some partially obscured, some fully—very few of them still stand free of the vines and clinging roots. (It doesn't feel quite as peaceful here.) If a statue's face looks a little bit familiar, you may not want to look at it too long.
Continue down the path and you will find yourself in a graveyard, one that seems centuries old. Most of the headstones are worn away by time and covered in moss, rendering them impossible to read. The few that are free of moss are blank, or bear only suggestions of names too faint to be understood. (Was that the name of—no, it couldn't have been. Could it?) Many of the headstones stand at an angle or are toppled over completely, having been subjected to either strong winds or the roots of the trees that grow up from some of the graves, spreading branches toward the sky.
TO THE EAST
The final exit of the station, to the east, puts you out on a quiet surface street. Are you hungry? Or are you paralyzed by choice? There are plenty of restaurants, offering options of almost any food you can imagine. You could try a convenience store—it's well stocked, and the items there seem free for the taking. How about a restaurant? There's no one to take your order, but when you look in the kitchen, there's something on the stove, and it's just what you've been craving. Imagine that.
A few blocks down, you come in through the lobby of a tall building and find yourself in a corporate office. The fluorescent lights are steady and unforgiving, and the cubicles and offices are empty. There are a few pieces of paper on desks, a few folders left in organizers, but everything is perfectly blank. Despite how empty and quiet the office is, it nonetheless gives you the feeling that just a few minutes ago, this place was bustling with workers going about their daily business.
You enter another building and find yourself in the lobby of an apartment complex—finally, a place to rest. The first door you try opens easily into a completely empty living room, freshly vacuumed but without a single piece of furniture. It's a nice apartment, quiet, but with a little too much echo for your taste, maybe. Still, and perhaps oddly, you have no trouble envisioning what life here would be like.
The second door you open leads to an apartment that feels lived-in. Why does it feel lived-in? It's fully furnished with items that seem to go together perfectly, true, but the feeling is more than that—the room feels like someone was just here, maybe standing right in the kitchen only moments before you swung the door open. The air is a perfectly comfortable temperature, and it somehow smells like home despite that you've never once set foot here before. The refrigerator is stocked, and the cabinets are full of spices and flatware and kitchen utensils.
As you look around the living room, you find that there are pictures in frames on the walls and some of the flat surfaces—a seascape, a field, a shot of a city park bench. In each of the photos there's something just slightly wrong with the angle, as though the photographer were aiming for a subject that can no longer be seen.
Characters are welcome to explore the district around the City Hall subway station to their heart's content. The City Hall building itself contains several floors of offices and file rooms, but none of them contain any particularly interesting information. Nonetheless, characters may wish to team up with other newcomers and try to find some hints about the nature of the city. They can also spend a while in the park, the statue garden, or the graveyard. In the blocks surrounding the station there are plenty of options for food and housing, as well as office buildings, storefronts, and alleyways to look around. There are no workers in any of the buildings, and there does not seem to be an honor system for payment, nor any consequences for taking food from the stores or setting up camp in an apartment or office building.
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IT IS THE ULTIMATE SHADOW, THE DEFEAT OF CREATION.
In one section of the newly accessible portion of the city, nestled in among normal looking residential and commercial buildings, is a wide and relatively short and industrial-looking building with no windows and only one grand set of black glass doors set into one side. Above the entrance is a neon sign that plainly states ART. with smaller letters sm added to the front in metallic paint. Hopefully, this simple signage will give passersby the impression that this is an art exhibit of some kind, with a twist.
DO NOT TOUCH THE ART…
Once stepping through the front doors, guests will be greeted with a lobby with walls covered in vertical neon lighting that pulses in a rotating rainbow, and mirrored ceilings that make the space feel surprisingly small. To one side is a bar where various cocktails await pickup. They don't have any special effects, but being a bit tipsy might help enhance the experiences waiting for you beyond. There's also a rack of bottles behind it, stocked with the typical liquors and mixers, if you'd like to play bartender for a while. Thanks to the disorienting amount of colored lighting and dark corners, it may be easy to get lost and turned around in the large building, and guests may be surprised to find that they're unable to locate the exit (or entrance) while alone.
After leaving behind the lobby and stepping into the exhibit proper, you'll find yourself walking through a central winding hallway with large rooms branching off from it in both directions at regular intervals. Some of them are more interactive than others, but all of them are dimly lit except for the "art" that guests will find themselves in the middle of, encouraged to touch and participate in creative collaboration. A few of the simpler rooms include:
Hanging ropes that will light up where touched, changing color with the amount of kinetic force applied: purple for a brush of the fingers, red for a crushing grip. These pulses of light will travel out to either end of the ropes the longer touch is applied, and considering that the room is pitch black and seemingly endless thanks to the mirrored walls, you may want to find some help in lighting up the dark.
A sunken floor filled to the brim with translucent plastic balls. This ball pit is a literal bath of color with every-changing light shining up from the floor of the ball pit and diffusing through the balls. A wall of cubbies at the room's entrance awaits belongings and shoes that are asked to be removed by a polite sign at the top of the stairs that descend into the ball pit. Be careful, for the pit is deep and it's easy to sink beneath the surface if you sit or lie down; you may see some shadows of people a ways away from you, but if you wade through the balls to their rescue, you won't find anyone tangible there.
A small theater of benches all facing the back wall that is a single large screen. The display is a moving series of lines on a black background that give the audience the sensation that the room is moving, or they themselves are traveling through the space. Atmospheric music—mostly heavy bass and noise that's been timed with the movement on the screen—hums through the room and adds to the sense of immersion.
... IT MIGHT TOUCH BACK.
One of the more interesting rooms is actually divided into three smaller rooms, each with a heavy, sound-dampening door that only has a small square window set into the top of it. Through the window, you can see that there is a red room, a green room, and a blue room. Stepping into any of them will be a different experience where guests will be entirely immersed in the color—even the window is a one-way mirror from the inside, blocking out any sights from beyond. The longer guests stay in these isolating rooms, the more disoriented they'll become, and it's entirely possible that moods will shift from the experience. Be careful stepping back out into the exhibit itself, your eyes and ears may need time to adjust.
In the green room, guests may feel like they've stepped into a concentrated and unfiltered essence of nature. The speakers play a variety of animal noises layered with leaves rustling and branches creaking as they move as well as wind, rain, and other kinds of weather. Looking at yourself, or your companions if someone stepped inside with you, you see their eyes and teeth pop clearly in the bath of green, somehow more obviously animal than ever.
In the red room, the temperature is higher than the rest of the exhibit, not uncomfortably so but noticeable all the same. Looking down at your skin, you can see more of the blemishes, the dark spots or pale scar tissue that contrasts much more starkly. From hidden speakers in the ceiling comes a mixture of sounds that are hard to place as they're so layered over one another, but the overall noise is inorganic, discordant, unsettling. It's hard to focus, let alone look at anyone else you might be sharing the room with.
In the blue room, there is almost an absence of experience. The only sound is a low, steady hum that vibrates through you as you stand and close your eyes almost on instinct. Everything gets erased in the layer of blue that covers everyone and everything in the room, skin looking almost gray from the lack of any other colors that are so often associated with life.
The last room of note is completely black and empty except for three massive umbrellas of flowers and other plants that are suspended from the tall ceiling, illuminated by lights shining on them from above. Each umbrella is about as high off the ground as the average human and varying by a few feet or so, so that it's possible to stand or crouch beneath them. Once standing in their shadows below, guests will be able to hear whispers coming from above…
These whispers tell real secrets of city residents—past, present, and future—though names are never included. The secrets are told in their own voices, though, almost like confessionals to a confidant or their pillow in the dark of night. These secrets can be positive, negative, or simple fact. Some may be shocking revelations of guilt, or shy mutterings of love, or secrets spilled as if the speaker has never thought of this part of themselves before. There is a hush throughout the room, and if guests were to whisper to each other beneath the umbrellas, conversations would not be easily overheard.
Residents are encouraged to meet up in the bar with friends, grab some drinks, and then head into the art exhibit. It's also a great place to meet someone new as there will be plenty of interactions happening as everyone hopefully discovers a bit of their inner child. There's no right or wrong order to exploring the rooms, but residents will not be able to find the exit without the presence of another with them—even if you came alone, you're leaving with a friend!
For the Secret Garden whispers, players are encouraged to make up something scandalous to discuss with others or even have their own character's voices whisper to them from the flowers. Please remember to discuss with other players before including any information about existing and potential characters that may affect their gameplay.
Inspiration for this location includes 9 Lights in 9 Rooms as well as Hopscotch. Title is from Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?.
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WILDCARD.
The city is by no means small, and there are plenty of things for you to see. There are even some places that other residents have created! There's no rush in exploring, so feel free to take your time looking around and peering into various nooks and crannies and alleyways—and don't worry, you're not very likely to find anything peering back.
If none of the above prompts appeal, feel free to check out the Locations and Maps pages and write your own freestyle prompt using one or many of the available locations. We highly recommend checking out the Character-Run Locations as well - they might be great places for new characters to get started!
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no subject
[Maybe Yi Sang does function fine, but he does wonder if that's all that it is. But he will have to assume that the man is being honest until otherwise stated, for now.]
Does the sky bring you a measure of peace?
no subject
To say that it brings some measure of peace is not wholly accurate. Simply... it was not visible to me for quite some time.
[ It had been quite difficult to see the stars through the factory smoke and haze of T Corp.
...nor had it been visible from that white room. ]
As a result, I suppose I have developed a fascination with it.
no subject
[The sky doesn't mean a lot to Daan, who spent most of his childhood looking at it. But then, what seems like nothing to him is a luxury to someone who lacked it.
He'll keep it in mind.]
Well. The view's not bad here, either.
no subject
That would be correct.
[ He brightens a bit at the sound of that. Perhaps the stars would be unfamiliar, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Having something to mull over is what keeps Yi Sang content.
He falls back into his thoughts, trying to recall whether there are any other conditions he should voice to Daan. ]
Mm, I suppose you must have gathered this much already, but I am somewhat susceptible to motion sickness. It is worst when I am at sea, though I do not foresee this being particularly troublesome here.
[ Another pause. ]
...there was a period of time where my senses were dulled through the administration of substances, but it is unclear as to whether any side effects from those supplements remain.
[ Typically, he would not volunteer such information, but it wasn't as though he had the time or opportunity to visit a doctor about it. ]
no subject
[Well, this is refreshingly honest. Daan gives his nod of approval as he digests the information. Overall, it doesn't seem like Yi Sang is that unhealthy based off of his explanations, but maybe time will tell in the future.]
Well. If you notice any side-effects or anything unusual going on with yourself medically, keep me in the loop. I might be able to do something about it.
I appreciate the information, Yi Sang. I won't keep you, but if you need to ask me anything I'll answer as best as I can.
no subject
I shall be sure to inform you.
[ Or at least, he'll try his best to track Daan down to relay any new details.
There is one thing that's been on his mind ever since Daan confirmed he was familiar with Vergilius and Don. ]
Where might I find Don Quixote or Vergilius? This City is... rather vast. Without guidance or direction, I fear I will be reduced to nothing more than an autumn leaf tossed about the winds.
no subject
I'm not their keepers, so your best bet might be to message them directly. You should have received a phone, right?
I can tell you their usernames, and you guys can figure out the rest. That sound all right by you?
no subject
He decides not to press. For now. Opting to stare at Daan wordlessly before realizing he'd been asked a question. ]
Oh. I believe so.
[ He fishes about his coat pocket, retrieving the phone he'd discovered on his person while sitting on that mysterious train. Yi Sang turns it over in his hands with a pensive expression. ]
It is my hope, then, that they do not mistake me for an imposter.
[ He glances back at Daan with an apologetic expression. ]
...if my question displeased you, please know it was not my intent to cause any discomfort.
no subject
[Said casually, as if doppelgangers are absolutely a thing where he's from (they are).
The remark earns a slightly surprised look, then he shakes his head.]
No, no discomfort. ...I was trying to think of the easiest way for you to get in contact with them, and the phone really just seemed best.
no subject
[ He seems comforted by the additional information too, because imitators, doppelgangers, and doubles, are something he's familiar with.
There had been days when he wishes he wasn't. ]
I see. Yes, I think that may be a viable option.
[ He returns the phone to his pocket. When he withdraws his hand, he clutches a leather bound notebook with a pen before gazing at Daan expectantly.
He'd prefer to jot the usernames down by hand. Despite his trade as an inventor, Yi Sang's always been a little old fashioned. ]
no subject
[Old fashioned? No problem. Daan's world isn't as advanced as a lot of places, and he had a lot to learn from Tsuruno when he first got his phone.]
Vergilius' username is just "The Red Gaze", but as all one word. Don's is also her name, all mashed together, except the "E" is a 3 at the end.
And that should do it. Hope you guys reunite soon. You can hit me up under "loveless" if you need.
no subject
"Theredgaze." "Donquixot-three." And... "loveless."
[ Yi Sang's pen hovers for a moment over Daan's username. Perhaps his choice of phrase was intentional? Compared to the other two, that username casts quite a different shadow. ]
Your username -- was it selected for you...?
no subject
[Daan shoves his hands into his pockets.]
Why? You want to ask about it?
no subject
My earlier statement continues to encompass my current sentiments. ...I have no desire to cause you discomfort or distress. That is all.
[ This topic seems dangerous. ]
Or, perhaps, a more accurate statement is that I have no desire to cause any additional discomfort or distress.
[ After all, it... seems like he's already stepped on that landmine. ]
no subject
Anyway. He lets out a sigh, and he shrugs.]
...Then we can drop the subject and move on, yeah?
[He thinks back to Marcoh, asking him why he picked the username. He thinks back again, to other exhibit he'd been to with Vergilius, how the username doesn't really apply anymore.
Yeah.
It's complicated.]
no subject
Yi Sang returns the notebook and pen to his pocket. ]
...that may be ideal.
[ Oh. Now he remembers. He'd been walking in circles, trying to find the exit to this bizarre art gallery. That door had eluded him, and his feet were weary from all the walking, making the theater's benches rather appealing.
There were rumors about visitors only being able to leave the gallery while accompanied with a second person, but surely that couldn't be true? ]
...
[ Asking Daan for even more assistance after stepping on his toes -- he can't possibly do that. He thinks he might prefer to keep walking in circles instead. ]
no subject
But the silence isn't doing either of them any favors.]
Whatever's on your mind, you might as well say it.
no subject
Even now, even after everything, it seems that continues to hold true.
He collects his thoughts and finally speaks. ]
I have heard whispers about the curious properties within this gallery, that one might only discover its exit when accompanied by another.
[ It's a strange aspect to include within a building. And it's not necessarily his old architecture trade coming into play allowing him to make that observation. It's simply impractical.
He stops for a moment with an uncomfortable expression. Asking for help has always been challenging, and his earlier curiosity landing him in his current musings isn't making it any easier. ]
...in truth, I had been searching for the exit earlier.
[ With any luck, his faux pas wouldn't make it back to Vergilius' ears... ]
no subject
It's probably correct. It's my first time here, so I couldn't tell you for sure, but frankly there are weird rules in this city anyway so that might as well be accurate.
We can try to retrace our steps together. I won't be leaving the museum personally, but if I can help you find the exit, then I'm fine with that.