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snowblindmods) wrote2016-03-11 03:16 am
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Setting Part One
Setting | |||
Residential Zone One ![]() (click to expand) Discovered Locations 1: A large park. Walking through it comes with a definite sense of unease that subsides outside of the boundaries of the park. It must have had a fence once, but it's gone now, making it a bit easier to travel across. There's somewhat-buried playground equipment scattered around, from a swing set to a jungle gym and a large playground set made out of brightly colored plastic. A spiral tunnel slide can still be accessed, and the snow around it has been cleared so that it can be slid down. It seems like someone dug around in this park once, but the holes have been filled in. Bits of metal and wood have been set up like grave markers near the covered up holes. 2: This house has almost entirely collapsed, but the basement door and staircase is against all odds intact, meaning as long as you don't mind staying overnight in a basement, it will keep you safe overnight. The basement has old furniture: a crib tucked away in a corner, a couch that's seen better, less-stained days, a small white dresser and matching child's bed, although it would have to be put together again and lacks a mattress. There are large, blank pieces of posterboard abandoned beneath some boxes of long-dried paint. There is also a trapdoor in the center of the room that leads to the maintenance tunnels. The snow has been scooped away from the area around the house outside, but there's nothing of note there. The house feels cold and abandoned no matter how many people are inside. 3: This single-story house is notable for the ramp leading up to the front door. Inside the hallways are fairly large and the bathroom especially has more than enough space for someone in a wheelchair to easily maneuver around. There's a kitchen, living room, dining room, and single bedroom where an old-fashioned wheelchair sits beside the bed. 4: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. There are plenty of knitted things in this house; the dining room is suspiciously empty, the place where the table used to be now bare, and there was once a large knitted bear, but it's disappeared. There are knitting materials to be found here, fittingly. The following has been written inside on the door: "SCHOOL 1 DAY WALK SOUTH FOOD IN THE CAFETERIA BEWARE OF MONSTERS" A snowman has been built outside. It wears a child-sized cowboy hat. 5: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The master bedroom has a king-sized bed and the second bedroom seems to have once been home to a young boy. There are three parallel indentations a few feet apart from each other on a high support beam in the basement. The following has been written inside on the door: "SCHOOL ~1 DAY WALK WEST ~1 DAY WALK SOUTH FOOD IN THE CAFETERIA BEWARE OF MONSTERS" 6: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. Judging by all the lovingly-crafted shelving, this house once was host to quite the porcelain animal statue collection. Once was, because they're all shattered all over the floors now. It looks like someone has at least swept all of the broken pieces into a corner. 7: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. There's a desk in the bedroom that holds a very old-fashioned typewriter that doesn't require electricity. There is one sheet of what looks like a torn out notebook sheet of paper in the typewriter. "8=======D" is typed onto it. 8: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The basement is unfinished but has been painted purple regardless, and there are a few small weights in one corner of it, though the barbells have been disassembled. There's enough space for larger exercise machines, but there aren't any. 9: An ordinary-looking two-story house. The bottom floor has a living room, kitchen, and dining room, with the top floor having a master bedroom, bathroom, and what appears to be a young boy's room, judging by the race car bed. There are abandoned children's scribbles on the hallway wall downstairs near the front door--stick figure people and animals, mostly. A figure of a tall humanoid has been drawn on the wall, along with tress, crossed out Os, and generally creepy pictures, all in black crayon. The drawings in black crayon seem newer than the other drawings. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the hallway wall in pen. 10: The living room, bathroom, and one extra room have survived well enough to stay in overnight here. The extra room has countless large fish tanks and open-topped cages; there are small animal bones in all of these, and someone familiar enough with such things could tell the open-topped cages housed guinea pigs and the tanks housed gerbils and hamsters. The living room has a very large tank that, while now lacking any sunning lamp, housed an anaconda; the bones and shed that remain make it obvious. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the hallway wall in pen. 11: The house in this case is fairly unremarkable: it's one story, consisting of two bedrooms, a bathroom, a living room, and a kitchen with an island and stools that probably served as a dining area. The backyard, however, is dangerous to travel over: there was an in-ground pool in the back, but it's long since been filled entirely with snow and then all signs of it covered over. Stepping onto it could easily lead to falling up to ten feet deep into the snow. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the wall of the hallway in pen. 12: This bizarre house, while fully intact, only consists of one very large empty room and a hatch that leads to the maintenance tunnels. 13: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. All the furniture here is modern in style--metal or plastic with either very sharp lines or no lines at all. One of the curtain rods is missing. There are framed movie posters and paintings that seem suited to a college town cafe, but they've been removed from the walls and stacked in a corner. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY THREE, TRAVELLING WEST" and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY FOUR, TRAVELLING SOUTH" are written on the hallway wall in pen. The following is written on the wall in blue ink: "This is Building 14 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is a fairly accurate map showing house 13 in relation to the park, convenience store, the north snow wall, houses 2, 8, 9, 19, 24, 25, 28, 31, 34, and 35, the funeral home, and the school and athletic shed. The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall". The funeral home is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". House 34 is labeled "Medical assistance; hot, clean water. Contact Dr. Epps @claytonator". The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". The park is labeled "Park", under which is written "Here lie buried many former residents of the town of Norfinbury. '...they will rest from their labor, for their deeds will follow them.' May they rest in peace." A scorpio symbol has been scratched into the glass of one of the windows somehow. 14: A standard two-story house. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The second bedroom upstairs is fitted for two children, and the mix of toys that includes trucks, dolls, and everything in between makes it impossible to discern any details about the children beyond that they must have been young. In the childrens' room, the windowsill has been roughed up and splintered away in places, as if someone had tried to break out. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the hallway wall in pen. A penis has been carved into the wood of the back door. There's a metal playset in the backyard that has two swings, a slide, and a small area beneath the slide where a child could climb inside and hide if they wanted. 15: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The windows were once boarded up, but the boards have been removed. The light flickers and twists strangely through the glass, tricks of the light making it look as if something is just outside even when there isn't. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the hallway wall in pen. Finger-sized slits have been cut into the couch cushions. An eye symbol has been cut into the sofa. 16: The sign on this convenience store is missing, but aside from that it's not in bad shape at all. The shelves are mostly intact, albeit also mostly empty. There doesn't seem to be any power, so the freezers unfortunately don't work, however. There's a small employee only area in the back--it doesn't have much, but there's a small table, three chairs, and a bathroom with one toilet and one sink. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY FOUR, TRAVELLING SOUTH" is written on the wall in pen. The following is written in blue ink on the wall: "Flush toilet and clean water available here. This is Building 17 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath is a fairly accurate map showing the convenience store in relation to the park, houses 13, 19, 24, 25, 28, 31, 34, and 35, the funeral home, and the school and athletic shed. The funeral home is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". House 34 is labeled "Medical assistance; hot, clean water. Contact Dr. Epps @claytonator". The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". The park is labeled "Park", under which is written "Here lie buried many former residents of the town of Norfinbury. '...they will rest from their labor, for their deeds will follow them.' May they rest in peace." In one corner of the convenience store, there's a large machine that looks a bit like a modern day movie rental machine--notable for that alone, it's also receiving power. While it's far too heavy to move, you can navigate a few simple touch screen menus to receive small cards that look like SD cards for your tablet. There are two versions: black cards that can be written on and read multiple times, like a standard SD card, and red versions which can only be written on and read once before erasing themselves. It's free, but you can only receive one card per day. 17: A standard two-story house. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The tub in the bathroom bears scorch marks and there's visible smoke damage to the ceiling and upper walls above the tub. All of the hallways are covered in puzzle pieces and jigsaw puzzles in various stages of completion. Whoever lived here was obviously an enthusiast, although why they've been scattered around like this is unknown. Two puzzles on the upstairs hallway floors, exhibiting a a lakeside cottage at sunset and a cityscape, have been completed. A puzzle of a garden and one of a floral pattern have been completed. A puzzle of dogs playing poker has been completed, and all the jigsaw puzzles have had their pieces placed beside their respective puzzles. Oddly, the house is a bit lacking in wooden furniture, though the beds are still standing. Finger-sized slits have been cut into the couch cushions. 18: A standard two-story house with a basement and attic. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. All of the rooms are a mess, with cushions and drawers and furniture scattered haphazardly. The table was set for four, but now everything's all over the floor and some of the plates have been shattered. 19: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. There's a hanging bird cage in the living room, but the door has been left open and there's no sign of bird remains inside. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY FORTY FOUR, TRAVELLING EAST." has been carved into one of the walls. A cardboard sign on the dining room table reads "DAY 61, REACHABLE SHELTER TO EAST, RESUPPLY POINT TWO DAYS EAST." 20: While this house has held up enough to guard against the dangerous nighttime cold, its roof has long-since soaked through with the weight of snow and ice, and the inside is a ruined, moldy mess. It wouldn't be a good idea to stay in here too long, lest you get sick, but it will serve for the night. Most of the house is completely unsalvagable, but the basement is relatively dry, and it might be possible to find a few things down there. 21: Water fills the entire first floor about a foot deep, pouring from burst pipes that never seem to quite run out of water but are leaking slowly enough to as not to flood any further. The entryway is spared only by virtue of being a small area about two feet above the rest of the first floor. The living room, kitchen, and dining room are all partially flooded with stagnant water in this way, and opening the door in the hallway to the basement reveals it's entirely flooded and inaccessible unless you'd like to try diving into the murky, unsanitary darkness. There are a couple of protest signs leaning against the wall beside the basement door that read "WE DON'T NEED A BABYSITTER" in bright red letters. One of the protest signs has had "WHO ARE YOU? WHO WATCHES YOU?" written on it in addition to its other message. The second floor is dry, thankfully, and has a master bedroom, bathroom, and guest room. A cardboard sign on the bed in the master bedroom reads "DAY 62, REACHABLE SHELTER TO EAST, SUPPLY POINT THREE DAYS EAST." 22: A frozen and cracked water pipe has rendered this house a bit soggy in places. The bathroom is very dangerous to attempt to cross, with its floor long-rotted by an apparently constant flow of cold water, and bits of the surrounding hallway are in the same dire shape. The kitchen is another story entirely. There's a giant hole in the floor that reveals a basement-sized sinkhole beneath the house, but there's nothing down there besides a damaged table. Some of the floorboards by the kitchen have been pulled up to reveal dirt underneath them. The rest of the house seems surprisingly free of water damage. There are two bedrooms, one decorated for a single woman and the other for a teenage boy; the room is covered in faded posters of unknown bands. There used to be a guitar here, but it's gone now. The house also has a dining room and living room. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY FORTY FOUR, TRAVELLING EAST." has been carved into one of the walls. 23: Half of the house has crumbled apart, but by climbing carefully across the rubble it's possible to pull yourself up onto the second floor where there's one room intact enough to spend the night in. At one point, it was an artist's studio; there's a large balcony with an easel and a blank canvas set up in front of it, along with other canvases in various states of completion. It seems like they painted mostly portraits; many canvases look back at you with the faces of people you don't know. Some of the canvases have been slashed and cut open. The balcony will hold weight, but not of more than one person, and jumping on it is ill-advised. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, GREED DAY FORTY SIX, TRAVELLING EAST" is carved into one of the walls. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI AND ZELOS WILDER, DAY 67, TRAVELING EAST" is carved into another wall. 24: This house has a first floor consisting of a living room, dining room, and kitchen, and a second floor consisting of a bathroom, master bedroom, and an office. What makes it stand out, however, is each room is painted in bright colors. The hallways are bright green, the living room is red, the dining room yellow, the kitchen blue, the bathroom orange, the master bedroom purple, and the office pink. The following has been written in large blue letters on the wall: "This is Building 31 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is drawn a pretty damn accurate map showing house 24 in relation to the west snow wall, the funeral home, the park, houses 28, 31, 34, and 35, and the school and athletic shed. The funeral home is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". House 34 is labeled "Medical assistance; hot, clean water. Contact Dr. Epps @claytonator". The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". The park is labeled "Park". The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall". The "Contact @SteveRogers for details" part of the message has been scratched out--it's legible, but someone was clearly meaning to cross out that part of the message. 25: There's only one room intact here--a bathroom. At least it's large--there's a Jacuzzi tub large enough to fit three people if they squeeze in a bit, a linen closet, a toilet, and a large sink. No hot water, though, and in fact the tub doesn't work at all. Maybe you can sleep in it. The door seals up, so it's workable as an overnight shelter. 26: This house feels cold and abandoned, more so than most. Most of the rooms are wallpapered, and the bedroom on the first floor has an especially large, fairly high bed. There are places on the walls for many, many pictures, to the point it seems like they would cover most of the walls in the hallways and bedroom, and the way the wallpaper has faded around them it's obvious some hung there for quite some time, but they're no longer there. Most of the wallpaper has been ripped down to reveal unremarkable wall beneath. Aside from the bedroom, there's a kitchen, dining room, two empty rooms upstairs, and two working bathrooms, one upstairs and one downstairs. The downstairs one has a shower with a ledge you can sit on, while the upstairs one has a claw-footed bathtub. Written on the wall is "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-FIVE, TRAVELLING SOUTH-WEST." Beneath that is written "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." Near that is written, in different handwriting, "House 33 of the map". "Where" is written on the wall, along with this map. A postcard has been placed in a spot where a picture used to hang with a thumbtack. 27: Part of east wall of this house has collapsed, exposing the first two stories to the elements. Snow has piled into the house, covering the kitchen and part of the living room on the bottom story and rendering the bed in the single bedroom upstairs unusable, covered in snow that has soaked the sheets and blankets and led to mold. The attic, however, is intact, and can be used to spend the night away from the elements. There are boxes and trunks up here, too large to carry around, but most of them are empty. "House 36 of the map" has been written on the wall. 28: This single-story house has a kitchen, dining room, bathroom and bedroom as expected, but in place of the living room is what appears to be a sun room jutting out of the house. It was clearly an addition after the house was built; it's overlong for the house, but half the south wall and all of the west one are glass, as well as part of the ceiling, making it a very bright place during the day. There are countless potted plants that appear to be in good shape; they're all poisonous flowers, however. Still, they're pretty to look at. Several of these pots have been upended, the soil dug into as if by human hands. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY SIX, TRAVELLING SOUTH" has been carved into the hallway wall. 29: A small shed outside the school, going inside reveals sports equipment is being stored in here. There are hurdles, various sports balls, giant mats, and the like. There's nothing that could be used as a weapon, though, unless you're going to try to hurl a basketball at someone's head. This is the only place on the campus it's possible to stay in overnight--if you try to stay anywhere else, you'll be made to leave at 7PM. The following is written on the wall in blue ink: "This is Building 46 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath is a fairly accurate map showing the shed in relation to the school. The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". Behind the shed is a small army of snowmen armed with sports equipment. There's a drawing spraypainted on the inside of the shed. It has been labeled "GEROMY". The skin color has been left blank. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SIX, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." is written on the wall. 30: A school that has begun to fall apart, bisecting the building. The only way to enter it is through the center, making it a bit difficult to properly search. There's a snowman outside with a sign in its hand reading "Z.D. <3 J.H". The school consists of two floors, both of which have scattered Ⓧs drawn on the boards in the classrooms: FIRST FLOOR Central Wing The center of the school seems to have crumbled down the middle at some point, leaving much of it open to the elements. The office and what remains of the auditorium are muddy, wet, molding messes. The cafeteria just to the north of the divide has survived quite well, however. It receives power and has many tables with attached benches. More importantly, the cafeteria receives food regularly. Admittedly it's what you would expect from a school cafeteria: a lot of frozen meals with some fruit, vegetables, and other things mixed in, and there aren't any ovens in the cafeteria's kitchen to heat anything up with, but this is a good place to check for food if you need it. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, DAY FORTY THREE, TRAVELLING NORTH-EAST." has been carved into one of the walls. A hot rod has been drawn on the wall with the initials JW. There's also a motorcycle and a few penises. A mark has been stained into the wall above the doorway. Northeast Wing There are six classrooms here, neatly arranged three on each side of the hall. These are kindergarten classrooms, judging by how all of them have small tables and chairs to go with them in place of desks, with blocky, colorful text on the walls and large alphabet or number or animal carpets on the ground. A few picture books can be found on the classroom, at about the level you would expect for a kindergarten class. The northeasternmost classroom has a large old wooden piano, but the strings have all been removed from the inside. At the end of the hallway is a staircase leading up. "I found a severed arm here, but it vanished. Restless spirit? - Enoch" has been written on the wall in one of the hallways. In the first classroom one comes across on this side, all the desks have collapsed in a pile, as if they were stacked up but then fell over. "JIM HAWKINS WAS HERE", "NORFINBURY SUCKS", "JH ZD ZF", and "JH <3 ZD" have been written in sharpie in the hallways. Northwest Wing There are six classrooms here, neatly arranged three on each side of the hall. These are the first grade classrooms, and they have small desks with ample storage space in them for children to place their schoolbooks. The desks are arranged neatly with one chair per desk and desks formed into small groups of four each, for a total of five groups in each classroom. There's a large, blank plastic board on the wall in the front of the classroom. There are a few books to be found here, though they are suited for first grade. At the end of the hallway is a staircase leading up. Southeast Wing There are six classrooms here, neatly arranged three on each side of the hall. These are the second grade classrooms, and they have small desks with ample storage space in them for children to place their schoolbooks. The desks are arranged in four rows of five desks each, with each desk touching the desk on either side of it, in front of a blank plastic board. At the end of the hallway is a staircase leading up. Southwest Wing There are six classrooms here, neatly arranged three on each side of the hall. These are the third grade classrooms, and they have small desks with ample storage space in them for children to place their schoolbooks. The desks are arranged in four columns of five desks, with no desks touching any other desks, in front of a blank plastic board on the wall. Every room has a simple multiplication table on the wall. At the end of the hallway is a staircase leading up. SECOND FLOOR Central Wing The second floor of the central wing is essentially in ruins. There were probably rooms here at once point, but they've all crashed to the ground below. Northeast Wing There are six classrooms here, neatly arranged three on each side of the hall. These are the fourth grade classrooms, and they have small desks with ample storage space in them for children to place their schoolbooks. The desks are arranged in four columns of five desks, with no desks touching any other desks, in front of a blank plastic board on the wall. Every room has a multiplication table on the wall--it covers from the twelves tables to the twenties tables. There is a similar poster for division. At the end of the hallway is a staircase leading down. Northwest Wing There is a small teacher's lounge on the northern wall of this hallway which contains a table, a few chairs, and a counter in the corner of the room that may have once held coffee machines, although no longer. There's also a large room that only contains multiple rows of tables and computer chairs, though there aren't any computers to be found. The south wall holds the library. There are books to be found here, but it's all fiction suited for an elementary school. The reference section is entirely empty. There's a large machine that looks a bit like a modern day movie rental machine--notable for that alone, but it's also receiving power. However, if you try to use it, you will be asked for ID, and will be denied if unable to provide it. If you have ID, it will give out a blank blue SD card. This card can be written on only once before becoming read-only. You can also insert a blue, written-on SD card you already own to make copies of it, but only twenty per day. Southeast Wing There are six classrooms here, neatly arranged three on each side of the hall. These are the fifth grade classrooms, and they have small desks with ample storage space in them for children to place their schoolbooks. The desks are arranged in four columns of five desks, with no desks touching any other desks, in front of a blank plastic board on the wall. Every room has a multiplication and division table on the wall--it covers up through 100, and also includes rules about fractions and decimals. The beginnings of algebra seem to be being taught as well. At the end of the hallway is a staircase leading down. Southwest Wing On the north wall is an art room. It's large and there are various art pieces in various stages of completion. That they're made by children is obvious, but not all of them are really that bad. Some of the kids really show talent! Arranged by date, it seems like while the art starts out fairly standard in topic the newer pieces are darker, muddier, and more distorted, to the point with some of the pieces it's impossible to tell what was even being painted. On the south wall is a music room. There's an area similar to a classroom with desks, but in the back are many various instruments. Most of them would be pretty cumbersome to carry around, except maybe some of the smaller woodwinds, but they are in working order. 31: This house is perhaps most easily recognized by the picket fence, paint worn off and wood exposed, that pushes up out of the snow and encircles the backyard. There's a half-buried doghouse near the main house, large enough for a human to crawl into--which is good, because the front and back doors are locked tight no matter the time of day. If you crawl through the doghouse, a large dog flap is attached to the house at the back, and you can get inside there; of course it's locked at night just like any other entryway. Inside is a standard single-story house consisting of a living room, kitchen, dining room, bathroom (though the shower doesn't work), and bedroom. All drawers and cupboards have been haphazardly opened and most of the furniture has been upended. Two black amorphous blobs have been spraypainted on the fence.. Written on the wall is "EMERGENCY RATIONS IN CUPBOARD. MEETING DAY 67, HOUSE TO WEST. CONTACT @CMDRSHEPARD" The following is written on the wall in blue ink: "This is Building 45 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is a fairly accurate map showing house 31 in relation to houses 25, 28, 31, 34, and 35, the funeral home, and the school and athletic shed. The funeral home is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". House 34 is labeled "Medical assistance; hot, clean water. Contact Dr. Epps @claytonator". The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". "ALPHONSE ELRIC AND EDWARD ELRIC, DAY NINETY-SIX, TRAVELLING SOUTH. IF ANY ASSISTANCE IS NEEDED CONTACT @LELRIC ANY TIME." has been carved onto the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on the wall. 32: The lighting in this building varies--at one point, the windows were painted over with black paint, but a lot of it has been removed. Still, it's darker in here than it is in a lot of buildings. Inside is a kitchen, living room, dining room, two bedrooms, and a bathroom, but it's difficult to search and it would be easy to overlook something dangerous in here. The couch has been damaged significantly; it could still be sat on in a pinch, but the covering and much of the foam have been torn away. 33: From the outside, this building looks like a house--go inside, though, and you'll be met with the lobby of a funeral home and an unnaturally suffocating atmosphere. It's very quiet here; the lobby is large but carpeted and designed in such a way sound doesn't carry very far at all. There are a few sofas and chairs and a small working restroom with a toilet, sink, and a small mirror attached to the wall. Travel through the first employees only area to the north and you'll find a small office with a large wooden desk. Oddly, there doesn't seem to be any paperwork anywhere. Travel through the large door in the lobby to the west and you'll find a similarly large viewing area. It's set up accordingly--there are rows of chairs and even a coffin, although anyone brave enough to check will find it empty. Continuing west, there's a hallway and another employees only door. Go through that door and, well, you'll be in a small morgue. The morgue here is small but lined on the north, east, and west wall with doors. There are small windows you can open from the outside and view what's inside. Sometimes there are bodies in there, and sometimes they're people you know. There's no way to open these doors, even if they're empty. There's one door to the south that appears to be a loading room for a herse, but there's no herse to be found and the room is quite dark. The atmosphere only grows more suffocating here the longer you stay; if you try to stay too long (longer than one OOC day), you'll be forced to leave. Similarly, at 7PM, you will be forced to leave and not allowed to take shelter here. 34: Most of this house is in ruins--to get to the door requires walking over some rubble of the ruined house, although it seems like someone has moved the worst of it, allowing easier access to the house. The intact door leads to two intact rooms, and therefore it can be used as an overnight shelter. The door opens to a master bedroom with a large mattress and a thick comforter--too thick to carry without trouble, but nice for staying overnight here. The master bedroom is attached to a functioning master bathroom; the most important thing to note here is that it has a working shower with about ten minutes of hot water every day. Some of the tiles in the shower have been shattered and broken away, revealing a metal wall beneath. One nightstand has been broken apart and burned. Written on the wall is "EMERGENCY RATIONS IN NIGHTSTAND. MEETING DAY 67, HOUSE TO NORTHWEST. CONTACT @CMDRSHEPARD". Carved on the wall is "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY NINETY-FIVE, TRAVELLING NORTH. IF ANY ASSISTANCE IS NEEDED CONTACT @LELRIC ANY TIME". One of the cabinets is marked with an X made of blue painter's tape. The following is written in blue ink on the wall: "This is Building 52 on the composite map. Medical assistance and hot, clean water available here. Toiletry supplies in bathroom cabinets. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is a pretty accurate map showing the house in relation to the west snow wall, the funeral home, the park, the convenience store, the school and athletic shed, and buildings 19, 20, 21, 24, 25, 28, 31, 35, and 37. House 35 is labeled "Extra supplies in kitchen cabinets." The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall." The park is labeled "Park." The convenience store is labeled "Convenience store; unlike store in northeast this is not a source of food." The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The athletic shed is labeled "Shed". The funeral home is labeled "UNSAFE; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." 35: The second floor of this house has collapsed, but it forms a good seal against the elements and the ceiling of the first floor has yet to collapse, so it's still serviceable as an overnight shelter. There is a small kitchen and living room with basic furniture, though no electronics or appliances. Small, finger-sized holes have been cut into the couch cushions. There are some small dents and scuffs on the walls of the kitchen. A small snow fort has been built outside. One of the cabinets is marked with an X made of blue painter's tape. A few splintered remains of a chair have been stuffed into one of the cabinets. On the chair is a note: "Feel free to use as you see fit : )! Be careful of splinters!" There are snails drawn in the margins of the page. Carved on the wall is "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY NINETY-FIVE, TRAVELLING NORTH. IF ANY ASSISTANCE IS NEEDED CONTACT @LELRIC ANY TIME". Carved on the wall is "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 145, February 4". 36: Most of this house appears pretty normal: there's a living room, kitchen, bedroom, and working bathroom. Of note, though, is the personal library on the upper floor; while it has hundreds of books, it seems like every one of them has had all of the pages torn out and lost somewhere. They're all neatly placed in the bookshelves, at least. The covers seem to imply the library was mostly fiction. Some of the furniture seems to have been destroyed, and is placed in a pile in an out-of-the-way corner. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SEVEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." has been carved on the wall. 37: While the kitchen of this two-story house has collapsed, there's a door sealing it off and making it suitable for staying in overnight. The living room is the only remaining room downstairs, while upstairs is a master bedroom, bathroom, and nursery. The crib has been taken apart, parts left in the corner of the robin's egg blue room. A rabbit mobile hangs over the space where the crib once sat, twisting and turning on its own from imperceptible shifts in the air around it. Delicately designed with carefully-drawn rabbits mounted on laminated poster board, it appears handmade. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY SEVEN, TRAVELLING SOUTH" has been carved into the living room wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SEVENTY-TWO, TRAVELLING SOUTH-EAST. DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." has been written on the wall. 38: At first glance it appears this house has collapsed entirely. However, there's a tunnel in the debris that leads in to an intact door and room. There's a living room and a small bathroom--only a toilet and a sink--intact within, but it locks at night and keeps the cold out. There are some claw marks on the walls of the bathroom. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SEVEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." has been carved on the wall. 39: This house seems very ordinary--the first floor has a kitchen, bathroom with only a toilet and sink, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has a master bedroom, second bedroom that seems set up as a guest bedroom, and a second bathroom that includes a shower. Many porcelain dolls have been put up in nice places around the house. They've all been turned to face the wall, and one has been broken and shoved under the couch. Childish drawings have been scribbled onto the walls around the house, though most of them are in the living room. The drawings include moths, stick figures of little girls, and little houses surrounded by trees and big mounds of snow. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY THIRTY, TRAVELLING NORTH." has been carved into one of the walls. 40: Only the living room has survived in this house, and it's very run-down inside. The wooden floor is soft in places, the couch is moldy, and there's something dripping somewhere in one of the walls in a pattern that's just off enough to not form anything close to a soothing rhythm. It looks like someone has torn into the couch, revealing that the mold is present deep within its core. All of the wooden furniture in this building has been taken apart, smashed to pieces, and the dry bits removed; even some parts of the floorboards have been pulled up and removed, revealing a metal floor beneath. There is a working wooden fireplace that regularly has dry wood nearby. "Do not burn furniture. Nasty smoke, very bad for your health. – Steve Rogers" has been written near the fireplace. Two human toes have been buried outside near the front door. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY SEVEN, TRAVELLING SOUTH" has been carved into the wall of the living room. Written in blue ink is "This is Building 66 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is a pretty accurate map showing the house in relation to the south and west snow walls, the school and athletic shed, the funeral home, and buildings 34, 35, 37, 39, 41, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 53, 57, 58, and 59. The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall." House 58 is labeled "Entrance to ice tunnels." The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The athletic shed is labeled "Shed". The funeral home is labeled "UNSAFE; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." House 34 is labeled "Medical assistance; hot, clean water.". There's a large blue crayon scribble beside this message. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY NINE, PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC FOR ANY ASSISTANCE." is written on one of the walls. 41: Step into the only remaining room in this house and you'll be in for a shock--at first blush, it looks like you've stepped into a room that has blood all over the floor and walls. Look closer, though, and it's actually paint. This was once an artist's studio, judging by the canvases stacked up in the corner. It seems like there were paintings on the canvases once, but now they're muddy or blacked out entirely by thick paint. Some of the paint on the walls has been scraped away, revealing yet more paint. Some of the canvases have had their paint scraped off, or have been taken apart entirely. 42: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. Whoever owned this house once liked clowns; there are countless clown figurines decorating the bedroom and living room. Oddly, most, if not all, of the figurines are shattered. The stuffed animals have been torn to pieces, and the pieces scattered around the house. There's also a life-sized clown statue in the corner of the living room. A happy face and sad face have been carved on the wall. 43: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. One of the chairs in the kitchen has been broken, with a leg missing, and pushed off into a corner out of the way. Another chair is broken in a more obvious way--it's missing a leg, too, but it looks like it was slammed against a doorway or something. There are scuff marks on the dining room floor. All of the furniture has been scattered about. The basement seems to have been converted into a veritable sports shrine. There's an old couch in front of a television stand that's empty of the large television that must have sat on it. The couch is missing a lot of its stuffing. The wall is covered in posters of various sports stars--none are people anyone would recognize, but the sports are: basketball and hockey. Even the area rug beneath the couch is a bold red and blue with the logo of the hockey team on it (an angry-looking goose, if you're curious). The TV stand in the basement looks like it was broken and then put back together. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY FORTY THREE, TRAVELLING NORTH." has been carved into one of the walls. " ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on one of the walls. 44: This house is fully intact--the first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has a master bedroom, child's bedroom (painted in faded yellow with pink flowers carefully stenciled onto the walls), and working bathroom. The fireplace here is a working, clean wood-burning fireplace, although you'll have to find wood for it. "T. HAMADA, DAY 24, EAST" has been carved into the doorframe above the door. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SEVEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." has been carved onto the wall. 45: An entirely boring one-story house. It consists of a bathroom, bedroom, office, kitchen, and living room. Each one is sparsely decorated and utilitarian in style. There's a comforter on the bed, though it would be cumbersome to travel with. A smiley face has been drawn on the wall. All of the furniture has been scattered around and knocked over, and the cushions of the chair and couch, along with the couch itself, have been cut open. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY SIX, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 46: The front door has been blocked from the inside by piles of debris that have fallen from the storage room above after the floor in that room buckled, but by searching around the house, a slippery-looking ladder can be found on the west wall leading up to an open second-story window (although it seals up at night). The first floor is inaccessible due to the fallen debris blocking the stairway, but the second floor has a master bedroom and bathroom with ten minutes of hot water. The storage room's floor has completely given way, so it's too dangerous to enter. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY NINETEEN, TRAVELLING WEST" and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY-NINE, TRAVELLING WEST." have been carved into one of the walls. 47: At first glance, all of the rooms in this single-story house (living room, kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, and office) seem empty of even the smallest bit of furniture. However, at second glance, the kitchen has a door to an intact basement full of various boxes, although not all of them are full or have anything useful. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY SEVEN, TRAVELLING SOUTH" has been carved into the hallway wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SEVENTY-TWO, TRAVELLING SOUTH-EAST. DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." has been written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SEVENTY-THREE, TRAVELLING SOUTH. DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." has been written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY NINE, PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC FOR ANY ASSISTANCE." has been written on the wall. 48: The only doors in this single-story house are the front door and the bathroom; all other doorways are separated by faded green and yellow curtain beads. Even the bedroom gets this treatment, and it's the same for the living room and kitchen. The beads seem to be made of glass; moving through the house is a bit of a noisy affair. The bead curtain leading into the living room has been torn down, with half of the strings now scattered on the floor and some of the beads shattered, leaving a small mess of glass. The sharp bits of broken glass have been swept to one side, out of the way of anyone walking. Small, finger-sized slits have been cut into the couch. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, DAY FORTY THREE, TRAVELLING NORTH-EAST." has been written on one of the walls. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-SIX, TRAVELLING NORTH-WEST. DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." has been written on the walls. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 133, January 23" is carved onto a wall. 49: A normal single-story house with a kitchen, living room, bathroom, and master bedroom. There's also a second bedroom that has been converted to a craft room; the crafts that have survived are dusty and mostly useless, being along the lines of scrapbooks and fabric cork boards. There's an old-fashioned but still working pedal-powered sewing machine here. A snowman has been built outside. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY-EIGHT, TRAVELLING NORTH." has been carved into one of the walls. 50: A standard two-story house with an attic. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The entire house has been done up inside in Victorian style--it probably cost quite a lot of money, and no detail is spared. The color scheme is a bit dark, though, and it's difficult to see in here during the night. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY EIGHT, TRAVELLING EAST" and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY-FOUR, TRAVELLING WEST" have been carved into the hallway wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY EIGHT, PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC FOR ANY ASSISTANCE." has been written on one of the walls. 51: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, and bedroom, although the wall of the bathroom has crumbled and taken the toilet and plumbing with it. There is a small bookcase in the bedroom with a few romance novels not fit for the under-eighteen set's consumption. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY-ONE, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into one of the walls. 52: This room is a two-story house with two upstairs bedrooms, a bathroom, a kitchen, a dining room area, and a living room. There isn't any furniture in the house, though; the place is empty except for installed fixtures like the cupboards in the kitchen and the toilet and bathtub in the bathroom. It seems like this house was likely unoccupied even before whatever happened here happened. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into one of the walls. 53: The walls of this single-story house are quite intact, although it seems pretty empty inside. There is a fireplace, but it doesn't seem to have been a wood-burning fireplace, and whatever mechanisms were used to work it have been removed, leaving only holes where devices might have once been. The kitchen and living room are entirely empty, but the bathroom is functional. There is one bedroom with a mattress on a bedframe, but it lacks bedding or even a pillow. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, DAY FORTY TWO, TRAVELLING NORTH." has been carved into one of the walls. 54: A standard single-story house. The kitchen has a small, broken table by the window with crumbled flowers in a long-dry vase broken on the floor. The living room has a fireplace that's was once blocked up with insulation; the majority of it has been removed, but some still clings to the walls of the fireplace, and who knows if it's safe to burn it? The bathroom is small but serviceable. The bedroom has a large, empty fish tank. The bones of small fish can be seen at the bottom of the tank. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY-ONE, TRAVELLING WEST" and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY-THREE, TRAVELLING WEST" have been carved into one of the walls, and the wall near the fireplace bears a picture of a Harley Davidson motorcycle with stylistic flames surrounding it in ballpoint pen at about knee-level. "I know you're watching me" is gouged into the wood on the wall near the fireplace. "Fireplace unsafe" is carved onto the dining room table, which has been leaned up near the fireplace. 55: This two-story house has a kitchen, dining room with a table that could seat ten, living room, bathroom, and bedroom on the first floor. The dining room's table has been flipped and the chairs have been smashed. There are scuffs on the dining room walls and the shattered remains of a couple dishes and a compact mirror. The larger pieces have been taken, while the smaller ones have been pushed off to one side in a corner. On the second floor is a bathroom and two more bedrooms. The second floor houses the master bedroom, while the other second floor bedroom has a red metal bunk bed on one side of the room and a twin bed on the other side, though all are unfortunately lacking in bedding. The first floor bedroom has two bunk beds opposite each other, one wooden and one light pink metal. Both of the bedrooms meant for children have plastic toy boxes that look like treasure chests, with a red one on the first floor and a blue one on the second. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY NINETEEN, TRAVELLING WEST" and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY TWENTY, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into one of the walls. " ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 156, February 15" has been carved into one of the walls. 56: All that's left of this house that can withstand the elements is a large master bedroom and its attached bathroom and walk-in closet. The bathtub is a small one, but it has hot water long enough to fill the bathtub once a day. The walk-in closet is windowless and dark--if there was a place for a light, it's long-since vanished--but near the back is a sealed up trapdoor. There's a dent in the wall next to the door, as if someone had slammed the door open very roughly. The floor has been nearly ruined, with only metal and scorched facade remaining. The trap door leads to the maintenance tunnels. "ALPHONSE ELRIC AND TADASHI HAMADA, DAY TEN, TRAVELLING EAST" is written on the wall inside. There's a large blue smear on the wall. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 187, March 17 or March 18." has been carved into the wall. 57: This house has collapsed, but some miracle of coincidence has led to it to collapse around an intact wall with an intact door, forming a single very dark sealed room to stay in overnight if you wish. The inside is covered in dust, debris, and rusting nails, of course, and there's no light inside that you don't bring in yourself, with not even a single window remaining (though there's broken glass implying some must have existed), but it's better than being outside. 58: A simple single-story building, the snow weighs uneasily on it, and it creaks and groans under the strain at the best of times. It's very dark, and only the kitchen and living room are intact. The couch has been ripped open, leaving it a mess of framing and foam stuffing. The kitchen has a back door. Two snowmen have been built outside. A message has been written on the wall in blue ink: "Don't wreck the snowmen! That's super mean!" "ALPHONSE ELRIC, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, DAY FORTY ONE, TRAVELLING EAST." has been carved into one of the walls. The following has been written on the wall in blue pen: "This is Building 59: Only the living room has survived in this house, but it seals up well enough to provide overnight shelter. Of note is a very old pool table in the center of the room. It's missing pool cues and balls, unfortunately, or you might be able to play a game. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY NINE, TRAVELLING SOUTH EAST" has been carved into the hallway wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FOUR, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." is written on one of the walls. 60: A standard two-story house with an attic. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. There are finger-sized slits cut into the couch cushions. The bathroom receives cold running water. There's an odd door in the attic--open it up and you can actually climb up onto the roof, although it's very slippery and covered in snow as would be expected. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY NINE, TRAVELLING EAST." has been carved into the hallway wall, and "ALPHONSE ELRIC AND TADASHI HAMADA, DAY TEN, TRAVELLING EAST" is written nearby. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 186, March 16 or March 17." is carved into the wall. "HIVE 99" and, directly beneath it, "♋️ CG" are spraypainted on the wall in the hallway. 61: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, bedroom, and office. The office has been tidied up; half of the elementary school work papers have been graded in hasty, chicken scratch writing, while the other half have been graded more neatly. Whoever graded neatly gave everyone, regardless of answers, an A+ and a smiley face. There are finger-sized slits in the couch cushions. "T. HAMADA, DAY 08, WEST" has been carved into the doorway above the door, and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY ELEVEN, TRAVELLING EAST" is written nearby. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 188, March 18 or March 19." is carved on the wall. Residential Zone Two ![]() (click to expand) Discovered Locations 62: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. There's a glass showcase cabinet in the living room decorated with various elementary-school sports awards and little plastic trophies, although the bases of all the statues are missing. The rightmost bedroom on the first floor is similarly decorated with sports memorabilia and posters of women athletes. It seems like a young girl once owned the room. The house feels especially lonely and empty no matter how many people are inside. 63: The back half of this two-story A-frame house has collapsed, but the living room on the first floor and the balcony on the second are still accessible and, in the case of the living room, seal up at night. The plugs in the living room work all night, but while the electricity is working, the house has a heavy, almost suffocating atmosphere. 64: This park must have been larger in the past, but now it's been half covered by the wall of snow that surrounds the town. What remains is a large wooden playset--it's a maze of wood that rises ten feet into the air at the highest peaks, and it's possible to travel across the whole thing from one side to the other without ever touching the ground. The slides are metal, so it probably wouldn't be comfortable to slide down them in this weather. There are a lot of areas to climb up, including tall wooden towers that make up the tallest areas. Of course, it's a bit more dangerous now with all the snow and ice and the lack of maintainence. With all the wooden support beams holding the structure up, the underside of the play area is an adventure of its own, with areas in darkness at all times of the day and lots of little nooks and crannies to explore. Dirt has been dug up, revealing a mass grave of mummified corpses. The air is very thick here, causing nosebleeds and dizziness as one draws closer to the bodies. 65: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. A faded happy birthday banner hangs in the dining room, and with the streamers and cute flowery paper plates stacked on the table, it looks like a child's birthday party was being celebrated. There are even some presents, although each one is open. All of the boxes, including the largest one, are empty, and countless rocks scattered around on the floor. An end table has been knocked over, and one leg is missing. The following has been written inside on the door: "Food < 1 day's walk SSE Regularly Resupplied" 66: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and two bedrooms. One bedroom is a simple pottery studio, although the kiln seems to have been removed. The pottery wheel is empty, as are the shelves where pottery once stood. The remains of the pottery can be found scattered around outside beneath the snow, as if someone stood on the roof and dropped them one by one. 67: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The house is decorated with items from various nations on Earth. Whoever lived here probably liked to travel. The bed in the bedroom has been dismantled. The metal frame remains, but some of the screws are gone. The mattress has been torn up, with the fabric removed from it and the foam inside having pieces missing from it. 68: This house appears to be a standard single-story house from the outside, but upon entering, only the entryway can be accessed, with a door sealing off the rest of the house. There is currently no way to access the rest of the house. The doorknob has snapped off of the closed door, and in fact it looks like a small bomb went off--some of the door's coating has been ruined, revealing metal beneath, and the hallway looks generally scorched. It's held up well, though, considering. The following is written on the wall in permanent marker: "SOME TYPE OF COMPUTER INSIDE. CAUTION: FORCING DOOR OPEN BROUGHT SPIDERS. - @JPHAWKINS, @STANDARDISSUE DAY 65". 69: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. It looks like all of the windows were smashed in with something like a bat, but they didn't smash all the way and instead left countless spiderweb-like cracks in the windows, making it difficult to see out of them. 70: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. One of the bedrooms was once littered with pages torn from a book, with various unnerving scribbles drawn all over them, but they're gone now. The backyard to this house is pretty large, including a plastic child's slide and a buried sandbox. The ice underneath the slide has been shattered. There is a mound of snow in the yard where it seems something has been buried. A chair--taken from the kitchen--has been placed over the mound. "UNIDENTIFIED CHILD - FOUND BY JPHAWKINS S.B. DAY 27" has been written on it in black paint. 71: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The water in this house works, but it comes out brown and has a metallic taste. Drinking it will lead to lead poisoning. 72: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. Water pours down from the ceiling into the kitchen constantly, leaving that room a soggy, moldy mess. Food in this house isn't to be trusted. A smiley face has been drawn on the wall in pencil. 73: Only the hallway is intact in this house. Someone has drawn eyes all along the walls of the hall and on the insides of the doors. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 136, January 26" is carved on the living room wall. 74: There's only one empty bedroom remaining of this house. The walls and floor are all covered with writing--complicated mathematical equations fill the entire room. It looks a little frightening and intense, but to someone who can decode the math, it's kind of sad; every equation is wrong. It's not even the complicated parts that are incorrect--whoever wrote all of this has mishandled things as basic as addition, subtraction, and the order of operation. The equations aren't at all novel, as well, instead being equations that are already well-known in the modern world. The equations have all been corrected in pen and chalk. Some of the zeroes in the equations have had black xes put through them, and smiley faces and other silly things have been drawn among the equations in bright green crayon. There are dried blood splatters on the floor and walls. Near the door, "Greed was here. Day 12, heading south." is written in red permanent marker, and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY FOURTEEN, TRAVELING EAST" is written nearby, and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY SIXTEEN, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into the wall by the door. The following is drawn on a sheet of sketchbook in blue ink, attached to the wall with blank address label stickers: "This is Building 20 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is a fairly accurate map showing the house in relation to the north snow wall, the northeast convenience store, the chapel, and buildings 7, 12, 23, 32, 62, 63, 65, 66, 70, 71, 73, 76, 79, 80, 85, 86, 87, 91, and 92. The snow wall is labeled " Snow wall." The convenience store is labeled "Convenience store, food available; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." "Mathematics is the music of reason. -JJS" is written on the wall. 75: "Mallard River Market" is written in large letters above the door of this convenience store. It's not very big, but it has something important going for it: upon entering, the lights snap to life, revealing shelves stocked with food. Not very healthy food, mind--here you'll find junk food, simple meals that don't have to be cooked, and no fruits, vegetables, milk, or other perishable goods--but this place is regularly restocked with food. There's also a small employees only area with a couch and a public bathroom with three stalls and three sinks, all of which work. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY SIXTEEN, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into one of the walls. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND TEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is carved on the wall. One of the shelves lies on the floor, crumpled and ruined, as if someone tried to use it to smash something. In one corner of the convenience store, there's a large machine that looks a bit like a modern day movie rental machine--notable for that alone, it's also receiving power. While it's far too heavy to move, you can navigate a few simple touch screen menus to receive small cards that look like SD cards for your tablet. There are two versions: black cards that can be written on and read multiple times, like a standard SD card, and red versions which can only be written on and read once before erasing themselves. It's free, but you can only receive one card per day. This is a business that closes at night; characters will not be allowed to stay here after 7PM. If they try to do so, they will be compelled to walk out and will not be able to enter again until the next morning. 76: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. All of the doors inside the house have had their handles broken off. They can still be pushed open, but none of them close properly, not even the bathroom. One of the dining room chairs has been smashed, and there's a few dents in the outer coating of the wall, as if a dining room chair had been smashed into it. These may be connected. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND ELEVEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" has been written onto one of the walls. 77: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. There's some posterboard and dried paint in the right first bedroom, and piles of boxes in the left one. All of the boxes and light furniture has been shoved into a pile. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI AND ZELOS WILDER, DAY 65, TRAVELING EAST" has been carved into one of the walls. 78: Only the basement is intact enough to stand against the weather at night, and it's difficult to find the half-buried staircase that leads down to the sealed door below. So buried by snow as it is, it's very dark and quiet inside the basement; even sounds inside sound a bit muffled. The basement itself has a few boxes in it, but it's mostly clean and empty. There's a small side room with no door that has some larger shelving on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, ANGEL, RHYS, ZELL DINCHT, DAY FIFTY-THREE, TRAVELLING SOUTH" is carved into the wall. 79: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. Each bedroom has a mattress. Small, finger-sized holes have been cut into the couch cushions. A cardboard sign on one of the mattresses reads "DAY 60, REACHABLE SHELTER TO EAST, NEARBY. REACHABLE RESUPPLY POINT TO EAST." "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY SEVENTEEN, TRAVELLING SOUTH" and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, GREED DAY FORTY SIX, TRAVELLING EAST" have been carved into one of the walls. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 148, February 7" is carved into the wall. 80: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. It's fine during the day, but at night the roof leaks as if the whole thing is full of holes. There's no mold, at least, though that's probably owing to the lack of any soft furniture or mattresses and the metal bedframes. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY SIXTEEN, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into the wall by the door and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND ELEVEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" has been written onto one of the walls. 81: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND THIRTEEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" has been written onto one of the walls. 82: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The house is decorated in religious paraphernalia, from the "BLESS THIS HOUSE" plaque in the entryway to the crucifix hung up in the master bedroom. The other bedroom seems to have housed a very young child, with the bed suited for someone just out of toddlerhood and painted in soft pink. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, DAY FIFTY-TWO, TRAVELLING NORTH-EAST" is carved into the wall. A smiley face has been drawn on the wall in pencil. 83: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. This house obviously had a lot of cats living in it at one point. The furniture is all clawed up, and there are many large cat towers scattered around the house (but particularly in the living room and bedroom). The dining room is missing a chair, and the door frame separating the kitchen and dining room has ugly dents and chips in it. The splintered remains of part of an end table litter the living room, and some fabric has been torn away from the sofa and its cushions. There is one litter box in each room in the house. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, BIFF, RHYS, DAY FORTY EIGHT, TRAVELLING SOUTH-EAST" has been carved into one of the walls. Finger-sized slits have been cut into the couch cushions. 84: Only the back rightmost room of this A-frame house remains usable. The only thing in the room is a piano. It's tuned and still works, though it looks like there's partially-cleaned blood inside it. There's no sheet music, though. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, ANGEL, RHYS, ZELL DINCHT, DAY FIFTY-THREE, TRAVELLING SOUTH" is carved into the wall. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI, ZELOS WILDER, DAY 060, HEADING SOUTH" is written on the wall. Smiley faces are drawn on the wall in pencil. 85: This single-story house is too ruined for most of it to be useable. In fact, every room is missing at least one wall. There's only one room that seals and locks: a small hallway coat closet. It will fit one person--maybe two if you really squeeze in. 86: The bedroom and attached bathroom are all that are intact in this house. The bedroom seems to have had some spectacular soundproofing installed: it's impossible to hear anything happening outside from inside this room when the door is closed and locked. Similarly, it's impossible to hear anything happening inside from outside. A symbol, pointing southwest, has been drawn on the wall. A sign reading "DAY 59, REACHABLE SHELTER ALONG BLOCKED PATH EAST. INFO ON DOOR UNCONFIRMED." has been placed on top of the dresser in the bedroom. There are a few ornate origami dogs in the bedroom and bathroom. "MARCOS WAS HERE" is written in red lipstick on one of the bedroom walls, next to a cute lipstick picture of a spider. "PANDORA WAS HERE" is written on the bedroom wall in drawing charcoal. The following has been written inside on the door: "Food < 1 day's walk NW Regularly Resupplied" 87: A standard single-story house with a living room, bathroom, and bedroom. The kitchen and dining room have had their wall collapse, exposing them to the elements and filling them with snow. The doors to the kitchen and dining room still work, however, allowing the house to still be sealed up against the elements at night. Finger-sized slits have been cut into the couch cushions. The bookcase is missing. 88: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. This house has a working wood-burning fireplace in the master bedroom, but no wood to burn in it. The armchair in the living room has been torn open and all of the foam inside and pieces of fabric outside have been removed. The couch has finger-sized holes cut into it. A sign reading "DAY 58. REACHABLE SHELTER ALONG SNOW BLOCK TO SOUTHEAST." has been placed on the table in the kitchen. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, BIFF, RHYS, DAY FORTY EIGHT, TRAVELLING SOUTH-EAST" has been carved into one of the walls. "WE DON'T NEED A BABYSITTER" and "WHO ARE YOU? WHO WATCHES YOU?" have been painted in black paint on either side of the door in large, stenciled letters. 89: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The upstairs master bedroom has been mostly cleared of furniture, which is now scattered around the rest of the house. All that remains is the bed. Blood stains the bed and the corner of the room, and "sorry for the mess, but they won't take us this way" has been written on the wall in marker in that same corner. In low light, an adult's and child's shadowy forms stand silently in the corner and watch the movements of anyone in the room at the time. The pressure in this room is high and often causes general discomfort, nosebleeds, nausea, and ear popping; it's worse the closer to the shadow corner one gets. A bloodstained, rusty butcher's knife rests on the ground in the bloody corner, completely unusable at this point and wrapped up in fabric. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, ANGEL, RHYS, ZELL DINCHT, DAY FIFTY-THREE, TRAVELLING SOUTH" is carved into the wall. Outside is a shallow, covered grave, perhaps three feet deep, in which the skeletons of an adult and child rest. 90: Only the dining room remains intact in this house. The table has been pushed up against the door which would have once led to the hallway, and there are chairs tumbled on the floor near the door that once led to the kitchen. It seems like they must have been stacked against the kitchen door at one point, but something pushed its way through. A sign reading "DAY 58. REACHABLE SHELTER TO SOUTH, SOUTHEAST. SNOW BLOCKING TO WEST." has been placed on the kitchen table. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, BIFF, RHYS, DAY FORTY EIGHT, TRAVELLING SOUTH-EAST" and "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI AND ZELOS WILDER, DAY 61, TRAVELING SOUTH" have been carved into one of the walls. " ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 138, January 28" is carved on the inside of the kitchen door, near floor level. Smiley faces are drawn on the wall in pencil. 91: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The weather is wearing heavily on this house, and when the winds get particularly bad the whole thing shakes and rattles as if it might fall apart at any moment. "Hiro Hamada, day 5" has been written on one of the walls. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-FOUR, TRAVELLING NORTH-WEST" is written on the wall, and beneath it "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC". 92: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The bedroom is half sleeping area and half workstation, with pages of fashion magazines cut out and stuck up all over the walls. When papers are placed on the workstation, said workstation turns on and displays edited versions of the outfits in the magazines. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND TEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is carved on the wall. 93: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The decorations here have an Eastern European style to them--around the Baltic region, although there aren't decorations in enough detail to place it more closely than that. Finger-sized slits are cut into the couch cushions. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY THIRTEEN, TRAVELING NORTH" is written by the door. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, DAY FIFTY-TWO, TRAVELLING NORTH-EAST" is carved into the wall. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI, ZELOS WILDER, DAY 059, HEADING NORTH" is written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY FIFTY EIGHT, TRAVELLING SOUTH." is written on the wall, alongside "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." "House 49 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. Smiley faces are drawn on the wall in pencil. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 153, February 12" is carved into the wall. Elsewhere, ""ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND THIRTEEN, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" has been written onto one of the walls. This symbol has been drawn on the living room floor in white chalk. There are a few drops of candle wax and a stain that smells vaguely of pine nearby. 94: A small graveyard that seems to be very old; it certainly seems much older than the buildings surrounding it, at any rate, even if there's no sign that shows when it was built. There are statues and gravestones, but the harsh weather has worn them away; the angels lack heads and have malformed wings, the headstones are often mere nubs, and none of the inscriptions have survived. 95: A large pond, it's difficult to find under all the snow and ice. It's completely frozen over, and even trying to cut through the ice only reveals a lot more ice. It might be possible to break through with a lot of effort, but there doesn't seem to be anything moving down there, so would the effort be worth it? 96: A small chapel--it's some sort of Christian denomination, but it's difficult to tell what kind with what little remains. Past the entrance are six pews on either side, all bolted down. The altar beyond is empty of its symbols, although the stained glass in the windows is of various saints. There is a small hallway beyond that leads to a room for a bride and a room for a groom, where weddings were once held, and a bathroom for men and women as well, each with two stalls and two sinks. There is also a stairwell down that seems like it should be locked but isn't, and through the doors in the basement is a morgue. It's small but the walls are lined with doors that contain behind them shelves for bodies. There are small windows that you can open from the outside to view what's inside. Sometimes there are bodies in there, and sometimes they're people you know. There's no way to open these doors, even if they're empty. One of the doors bears some small dents and scuffs, as well as a small spiral drawn in red marker, which has been partially rubbed off. The atmosphere only grows more suffocating here the longer you stay; if you try to stay too long (longer than one OOC day), you'll be forced to leave. Similarly, at 7PM, you will be forced to leave and not allowed to take shelter here. 97: A standard two-story house with an attic. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The attic's roof has collapsed and can't be accessed at night. During the night, footsteps can be heard in the attic. "@winston, third day. Someone is in the attic." is written on the wall in pink gel pen. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, RHYS, DAY FIFTY, TRAVELLING SOUTH-EAST" is carved into the wall. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI, ZELOS WILDER, DAY 058, HEADING NORTH" is written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY NINE, FOR ANY HELP OR ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 98: A standard two-story house with a basement. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. All of the clothes in the house have been cut into tiny squares with scissors and spread all over the house, though particularly on the stairs and in the halls. A page from a children's book has been secured to the kitchen door with a band-aid, bearing this image. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY THIRTEEN, TRAVELING NORTH" is written by the door. "House 54 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND EIGHT, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CALL @LELRIC" is carved on the wall. 99: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The master bedroom has a large walk-in closet that has countless shoes within, fit for all sorts of fancy occasions. Unfortunately, this person's definition of fancy involves high heels and sandals, so they're not really suited to traveling around town right now. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-FOUR, TRAVELLING NORTH-WEST" is written on the wall, and beneath it "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC". On a wall easily visible immediately upon entering, is a somewhat roughly drawn map in blue ink showing houses 26, 27, 32, 36, 38, 85, 86, 91, 92, 98, 99, 100, 102, and 103, the convenience store, the chapel, and the school and athletic shed. 99 is marked with an "X" and labeled "You are here". The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". The convenience store is labeled "Convenience store. Food available; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". Next to the map is "Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." 100: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The downstairs bedrooms are used for storage and contain a lot of boxes and trunks that seem to be pretty unorganized. All of the boxes and trunks in the right bedroom are empty. The master bedroom has a general astronomy theme based on the stardusted comforter--there were posters here, once, but they're gone now. There are glow-in-the-dark star stickers on the wall above the bed arranged to look kind of like an upside-down giraffe. There's a chair on the balcony positioned as if it once was used to sit and observe the sky with a telescope, but the telescope isn't there anymore. A smiley face has been drawn on the wall. A second, larger smiley face has been drawn next to it in drawing charcoal. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND EIGHT, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CALL @LELRIC" is carved on the wall. "Al will be writing on the walls: ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-ONE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on one of the walls. This house feels lonely and empty no matter how many people are in it. 101: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The couch in the living room has been torn open and some of the foam has been removed. Much of the furniture has been destroyed, with all of the tables flipped over, a nightstand dismantled, and a chair in the dining room broken.The left bedroom downstairs seems to have belonged to an older teenaged boy. There are discolored spots that indicate a lot of papers must have hung on the wall at one point, but they're gone now. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, FREYA CRESCENT, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, BIFF, DAY FIFTY-ONE, TRAVELLING NORTH" is carved into the wall. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI, ZELOS WILDER, DAY 53, HEADING NORTH" is written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY FIFTY NINE, TRAVELLING SOUTH" is written on the wall, alongside "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." ""House 58 of the map"" is written on the wall in marker. The left bedroom is covered in crude drawings in marker of the start of bomb schematics, cute bombs with smiley faces and depictions of explosions. Some of the better looking explosions have been added to with highligher. A smiley face has been drawn on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY EIGHT, PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC FOR ASSISTANCE" is carved on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-THREE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on one of the walls. The house feels cold, empty, and abandoned no matter how many people are inside it. 102: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The right first floor bedroom belonged to a child who was very interested in dinosaurs; there are simple books on dinosaurs suited for a child between seven and nine, dinosaur posters, a child's dinosaur drawings taped up on the walls, and even a dinosaur comforter (an apatosaurus, specifically). The left first floor bedroom is a nursery with yellow-painted walls and cute cats and dogs stenciled onto the walls, but the crib has been turned upside-down, making it look like a bizarre cage. "CMDR JANE SHEPARD, DAY 54, TRAVELLING SOUTH" is written in ballpoint pen on the wall beside a doodle of a logo. There is a rough map drawn in blue ink on the wall indicating houses 26, 27, 32, 36, 38, 85, 86, 91, 92, 98, 99, 100, 102, and 103, the convenience store, the chapel, and the school and athletic shed. 102 is marked with an "X" and labeled "You are here". The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The shed is labeled "Shed". The convenience store is labeled "Convenience store. Food available; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT". Next to the map is written, also in blue ink, "Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." 103: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY TWELVE, TRAVELING NORTH" is written by the door, and "Greed was here. Day 13, headed south." is written nearby in red permanent marker. "T. HAMADA, DAY 27, NORTH" has been written above the door. "CMDR JANE SHEPARD, DAY 53, TRAVELLING EAST" is written in ballpoint pen by the other names. The following is written in blue ink: "This is Building 62 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath this is a fairly accurate map showing the house in relation to the gas station, the school and athletic shed, the chapel, the northeast convenience store, and buildings 17, 18, 22, 23, 26, 27, 32, 36, 38, 42, 43, 44, 45, 51, 52, 54, 55, 74, 79, 80, 85, 86, 87, 91, 92, 98, 99, 100, 102, 103, 107, 108, 111, 112, 114, and 115. The gas station is labeled "Gas station; clean water, working toilet." The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The athletic shed is labeled "Shed". The convenience store is labeled "Convenience store, food available; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." "House 62 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY ONE, FOR ANY HELP OR ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 104: This single-story house is barely standing, with the rooms indistinguishable from each other. It must have caught fire at some point, for every room is charred black and all of the furniture reduced to ashes. It isn't good for much except huddling in overnight. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY EIGHT, PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC FOR ASSISTANCE" is carved on the wall. 105: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and two bedrooms. One bedroom has been converted into an amateur photography dark room, and while most of the equipment and chemicals are gone, it's still pitch black with no windows. The dining room has chair debris all over the place and a scratched up wall, as if someone was smashing something against it. Upon closer examination, two legs are missing from the chair debris. 106: Only the living room remains intact in this house. It seems like it still receives water, though, because there are ice stalagmites on the floor that increase drip by drip nightly, when the ceiling begins to leak and drip. "SHEENA FUJIBAYASHI AND ZELOS WILDER, DAY 63, TRAVELING NORTH-WEST" has been carved into one of the walls. 107: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. From the outside, the curtains appear drawn, but if you go inside, it's apparent the curtains are built into the windows and can't be raised at all. The interior of the house is very dark as a result, and completely empty. Near the back of the house is an automatic door. A steep, dark staircase leads to what was probably once a small bunker. It looks like it was built to hold a small family for a short period of time. The entire thing seems to be made of metal, and looking at the doors will reveal lead shielding at their cores. There are three beds and here, and a mummified corpse for each: one adult man and two little boys somewhere between six and ten. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, FREYA CRESCENT, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY NINETEEN, TRAVELLING WEST" has been carved into one of the walls. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY FIVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 108: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The bed in the bedroom is a loft-style bed, giving extra space for the desk beneath it. One of the desk drawers is empty, and the others have countless small plastic cases that look like they could have been SD cards, although there aren't any computer chips in them. These are only plastic shells. The house feels cold and abandoned no matter how many people are in it. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY ONE, FOR ANY HELP OR ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY FIVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 109: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. The house is empty, though; it seems like no one was living here even when the town was populated. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-ONE, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the wall, alongside "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." The following is written on the dining room floor in morse code: Duster, Day 124, Gwen, Melengar, Ratibor, Blackwater, brideeth. Beneath that, also in morse code, is "House annoying. Incredibly annoying." 110: While all the pumps are missing, this is undoubtedly a gas station just based on the flat area and the large flat roof above it. Digging under the snow will even reveal the holes where the pumps once were. Going inside the gas station, it's very small; it can't be called a convenience store, and while it's very clean, there's hardly anything inside. Behind the counter is a door that leads to a small bathroom with only one toilet and one sink. It receives water, so it's better than nothing, even if that water is cold. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY, FOR ANY HELP OR ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 111: A standard single-story house with a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and bedroom. There isn't any furniture here, and for good reason: everything is packed up in boxes in the living room. Maybe someone was in the process of moving out. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY, FOR ANY HELP OR ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 112: Only the small bathroom is intact in this house, and it doesn't even receive water. There's only a small claw-footed bathtub to sleep in, too. It would be difficult to fit more than two people in here, and even that's putting them both in pretty close quarters. "T. HAMADA, DAY 06, WEST" has been carved into the doorframe above the door inside the bathroom. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 123, January 13" is carved into the bathroom wall, possibly with something like an axe. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY, FOR ANY HELP OR ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" is written on the wall. 113: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. There's no furniture in this house, but the central heating works for one hour a night--although the exact hour is random. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-TWO, TRAVELLING WEST" is written on the wall, alongside "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC." "House 86 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. 114: This house is full of holes. Every room is full of snow and mold and completely unsuitable for an overnight stay--except for the attic. All of the boxes and trunks have been pushed to the edges of the room and octagons and hexagons have been drawn all over the floor with black paint. "T. HAMADA, DAY 25, EAST" has been carved into the doorframe above the door. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 188, March 18 or March 19." is carved on the wall. 115: Only the master bedroom is intact in this house. It's mostly inoffensive even though there's only a mattress to sleep on with no bedsheets, but there's also a large full-length mirror built into the far wall. The mirror was shatterproof... But now it has shattered, revealing an empty nook behind it. The shards of glass can't be removed. They reflect light eerily in the room, especially at night. A Reaper and the N7 logo have been doodled in the dust on the floor. "CMDR JANE SHEPARD, DAY 56, TRAVELLING EAST" has been written on the wall. "115: ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, EDWARD ELRIC, GREED, DAY SIXTY-THREE, TRAVELLING NORTH-WEST" is written on the wall, and beneath it "DEAR FORMER RESIDENT, WE ARE FRIENDS, PLEASE DO NOT FEEL YOU NEED TO HIDE FROM US. CONTACT LELRIC". "Rations inside. Please only take in an emergency. Replace if you can." is written on the drawer of an endtable. 116: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has collapsed and is inaccessible. The house is rather plain, but at night when the wind blows through the rubble it sounds as if someone is moaning in pain just above the house. "House 93 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. Finger-sized slits have been cut into the couch cushions. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 189, March 19 or March 20." is carved on the wall. 117: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony, although the balcony has partially collapsed and what remains isn't safe to walk on. One couch cushion is missing. There's an office in the right bedroom downstairs. On the floor beside the desk is an odd-looking case that's bolted to the floor. Open it up and it seems like there are countless slots for small SD cards, or something. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, STEPHANIE BROWN, GREED, EDWARD ELRIC, DAY FORTY FOUR, TRAVELLING EAST." has been carved into one of the walls. "House 94 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. 118: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The kitchen in this house is larger and nicer than average, with expensive cupboards, counter tops, and flooring. It was probably very well-stocked back in the day, even if now it's missing all its appliances. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, TADASHI HAMADA, STEPH BROWN, MAMI TOMOE, DAY TWELVE, TRAVELING NORTH" is written by the door. The following is written on the wall in blue ink: "This is Building 101 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath is a fairly accurate map showing the house in relation to the south snow wall, the gas station, the school and athletic shed, the chapel, and buildings 32, 36, 38, 42, 43, 44, 45, 51, 52, 54, 55, 56, 59, 60, 61, 91, 92, 98, 99, 100, 102, 103, 107, 108, 111, 112, 114, 115, 116, 119, and 120. The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall." The gas station is labeled "Gas station; clean water, working toilet." The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The athletic shed is labeled "Shed". The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." A note by building 56 says "Clean hot water, enough to fill bath tub." The map has been edited with black pen: a route has been drawn from building 50 to 56 to here, and building 50 has been added, but not given a number. The wobbly line of the ice wall has been added. A spiral has been drawn beside the map, and spirals have been drawn all over the map as well. It's only possible to read the map with a lot of effort now. "ALFIE SOLOMONS, 1922. Camden Town, London, England, UK, Europe, Earth. Day 189, March 19 or March 20." is carved into the wall. 119: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. Everything has been thrown around chaotically, with the couch flipped over, chairs thrown about and broken, and cushions ripped up. One of the downstairs bedrooms is an office and the other is a guest room. There's a thick quilt in the master bedroom upstairs with triangular patterns on it; not convenient for carrying, but nice while you're here. The quilt has been torn open. The plugs in his house work between 1AM and 1:10AM. In blue ink on the wall is written "This is Building 102 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath is a fairly accurate map showing the house in relation to the south snow wall, the gas station, the school and athletic shed, the chapel, and buildings 32, 36, 38, 42, 43, 44, 45, 51, 52, 54, 55, 56, 59, 60, 61, 91, 92, 98, 99, 100, 102, 103, 107, 108, 111, 112, 114, 115, 116, 118, and 120. The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall." The gas station is labeled "Gas station; clean water, working toilet." House 56 is labeled "Clean, hot water, enough to fill bathtub." The school is labeled "School. Food available in cafeteria; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The athletic shed is labeled "Shed". The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." A smiley face has been drawn on the wall. 120: A standard two-story house with an attic. The first floor has a kitchen, living room, and dining room, while the second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. Fabric has been removed from the back of the couch. There's a large blue smear on the wall. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-TWO, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on one of the walls. 121: A two-story A-frame house. The first floor has a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms. One of the couch cushions is missing. It looks as if someone travelling through has cleaned up the house a bit; everything seems pretty neat. The second floor has a master bedroom, master bathroom, and balcony. The living room is wallpapered, but the wallpaper in the corners of the room appear to have been torn up. Closer inspection reveals that it seems like someone clawed the wallpaper up with their fingernails. There are also scuff marks and abrasions in it where it seems the walls were struck with something. Some of the wallpaper has been torn down completely, and near these points, an electric humming can be heard. The atmosphere here is very oppressive; staying for too long causes dizziness. "House 104 of the map" is written on the wall in marker. A smiley face has been drawn on the wall. 122: This A-frame house consists of one large empty room and a sealed door that leads to the maintenance tunnels. A penis has been drawn on a corner of the wall in some sweet-smelling dried white substance, as well as "suck it". Below the words, "you first" is written in pen. "It is a two dimensional drawing. It cannot be sucked." is written below as well, in neat block letters. On the wall in blue ink is written "This is Building 105 on the composite map. Contact @CaptSteveRogers for details." Underneath is a fairly accurate map showing the house in relation to the south and east snow walls, the gas station, the convenience store, the chapel, the vet's office, and buildings 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 93, 97, 99, 101, 102, 104, 105, 106, 108, 109, 111, 112, 113, 115, 116, 117, 119, 120, and 121. The snow wall is labeled "Snow wall." The gas station is labeled "Gas station; clean water, working toilet." The convenience store is labeled "Convenience store, food available; DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The chapel is labeled "UNSAFE, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." The vet's office is labeled "Presumably unsafe, DO NOT STAY HERE OVERNIGHT." 123: A quiet veterinarian's office. The power no longer works here, and it's so quiet your footsteps echo on the floor, but it's very clean inside and smells faintly of disinfectant, as if it was only just cleaned. There's a waiting room with a few benches and a reception desk in the center, as well as two public restrooms off to one side, one for men and one for women. There are three small examination rooms; the first one has a dog mural, the second a cat mural, and the third many different sorts of animals all together. Pass down the hall beyond that and through the employees only area and you'll reach a main area with various shelves--maybe you can find some medicine here, though it would be for animals. There's a surgery room with two gleaming, perfectly clean metal tables, although all of the expected machinery is missing. There's a small kennel and a quarantine area, as well as an office for the vet that has a desk and chair but no paperwork. In the back there's a freezer; you can look inside through a small window, but it's very dark. There are black bags inside--this is where they keep the bodies of animals. Sometimes you can see the outline of them, if one has died recently. There is a message scratched into the wall next to the front door, reading "T. HAMADA, DAY 04, WEST". The atmosphere only grows more suffocating here the longer you stay; if you try to stay too long (longer than one OOC day), you'll be forced to leave. Similarly, at 7PM, you will be forced to leave and not allowed to take shelter here. 124: This house, covered in snow, is dark and cold, but better than outside. The snow presses in on the windows and makes the roof creak and groan whenever it shifts, but it seems to be holding up alright. It's a standard, single-story house with a living room, single bedroom, bathroom, kitchen, and dining room. There's a bed frame in the bedroom, but it doesn't have a mattress. The house is sparsely furnished, unfortunately with mostly metal There's a back door leading off into darkness, but it isn't locked. There's a blue smear on the bathroom cabinet. Xs have been carved into the cabinets in the kitchen. There are large smears of black spraypaint on the front and back doors. "Hsiaoke Pass" had been carved into the wall next to the back door, but it's been scratched off crudely with some sort of blade. It's been carved back in again nearby, deeply and with purpose. This marking has been stained into the material above the front door. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FOURTEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." has been written on a wall. Split Tunnels ![]() (click to expand) Discovered Locations 174: This isn't exactly an apartment so much as it's a gloriously intact hallway. Well, mostly intact--the doors leading to what were probably once apartments are collapsed along with anything inside the aforementioned apartments, and the hallway itself is empty of all its contents, but it seals up at night and keeps the cold out. 175: A relatively intact apartment--it even has a window! Of course, the window looks out into densely packed snow, but one shouldn't look a gift horse in the mouth. There are two bedrooms--one with a full-sized bed, and one decorated for a child. The child-sized twin still has its mattress, though the full-sized bed is lacking. The living room is filled with very heavy furniture--wait, is the sofa nailed down? The water here doesn't work, except for the toilet. 176: A one bedroom apartment. It's a bit cramped, with the kitchen and living room one combined room, a small bathroom with an unworking shower and no tub, and a bedroom that only has room for a twin bed, but it keeps some of the chill away. A plate-sized eye symbol has been drawn in ballpoint pen on every wall in the house, and beside each one is "Drawn on Day 161 by Dr. G. House." 177: A small, barely-there ruin. At first it doesn't look like anything at all, but upon closer inspection there's a hole that can be climbed down into. It's a bit of a dicey drop from the ceiling into the first floor apartment, and it's very dark without outside light sources, but inside is a long-dried bloodstain that seems to take up all of what remains of the floor. There is a large section of the wall that has had its drywall removed, leaving only metal. Written in red gel pen is "There was an eye symbol here from a former resident. It has been marked out by Dr. G. House on Day 166. Observations made with Prophet Eye App. Eye symbol ceased glowing after being marked out with pen." Elsewhere, "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND TWELVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC" has been written onto one of the walls. 178: This apartment is completely empty, with only the walls remaining. There are chunks taken out of the walls, leaving only metal beneath. 179: This isn't an apartment so much as it's a storage closet for the second floor apartments. It fits about three people comfortably--more could fit in if everyone really squeezed in, but it wouldn't be comfortable. There's a large sink in the back made of some kind of plastic--the kind you might see in a basement sink--that still works, and even has hot water! 180: Only the bedroom remains of this apartment, but it's got a plush carpet and a mattress with a very heavy comforter (too heavy to carry around), making it a nice place to stay the night. 181: A nondescript apartment with a nondescript bedroom, bathroom, living room, and kitchen, and an ancient, nondescript bloodstain that indicates someone was once dragged out the door, alive or dead. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FOUR, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on one of the walls. 182: A small, half-destroyed apartment, but it seals up at night. The living room and kitchen area is a useless mess of debris, but the single bedroom--with a mattress--and bathroom (the shower doesn't work, sorry) beyond are acceptable enough, if sparsely decorated in neutral tones. 183: This apartment seals up at night, but that's all that can really be said for it. All the furnitue has been broken--and the remaining furniture is mostly metal, so obviously someone put a lot of effort into this. There's a combined kitchen and living room, a bedroom, and a bathroom, but it's difficult to figure out what each area is for if you don't know how an apartment layout works, since everything is scattered everywhere. It's difficult to find things here even with good lighting. At least the toilet is working, even if someone seems to have smashed the sink to pieces. The walls seem to have been scraped to pieces, revealing their metal innards. 184: A ruined mess of an apartment, only what might have once been a living room is accessible, with the rest hopelessly blocked and buried to the point it would be impossible to open up access to them. There are many circles drawn sloppily on the floor in red paint. It's only sloppy in terms of the paint splatters, though: measurement would reveal the circles to be perfect. This place isn't suitable for staying in overnight. 185: This is a single room on the second floor--or three quarters of one, anyway, with one wall having collapsed, leaving it open and making it unsuitable to stay in overnight. Examining what little remains of the walls reveals this was likely once a laundry room. Drawings of eyes in black paint, much like the ones elsewhere in town, are all over the east wall. 186: This apartment doesn't have a door anymore, or even a wall where a door would be--it yawns open to the elements. Inside is the ruins of a living room, bathroom, and bedroom. The bedframe sits upside-down in the living room, bent nearly in half. "SINNER" is written on the bedroom wall in red paint. 187: This was once an apartment. Now, it's a ruin, though a somewhat carefully sculpted one. The debris has all been pushed to the edges and, in fact, glued down somehow. In the center of this circle of rubble is a chair, and a ragdoll sitting in it. Where it should have a face, it instead has a scribble drawn over its face. Both the chair and the ragdoll are glued down and cannot be moved. 188: Only the bathroom remains of this apartment--a shower, attached tub, a sink, and a closet. It's cramped, but it's livable--and the hot water works! "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FIVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." have been written on a wall. 189: A single bedroom apartment. It's seen better days, but the door locks up at night. The window is sealed shut, with snow packed in on he other side allowing no light in. It's pitch black at night, but there is a couch to sleep on, even if the bed only has its frame. The bathroom has a toilet and shower--the shower doesn't work, but the toilet does. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." have been written on a wall. 190: A standard apartment. It contains a living room, small kitchen, two bedrooms, and a bathroom situated in between both bedrooms. Maybe the only interesting thing here is that the bathroom has three doors: you can enter it from the hallway, but also from either bedroom. 191: A small, single-bedroom apartment. The toilet in the bathroom works, but the shower doesn't, and the sink is missing entirely, with any holes for plumbing having been sealed up. The bedroom has only a bed frame. The kitchen and living room are one room combined, carpeted in the living room and tiled in the kitchen. "GO BACK" is scrawled in red paint on the kitchen wall. 192: A ruined third floor apartment--at least, it was probably an apartment. The whole place is littered with debris and crumpled in to the point only one, empty room remains. It does have a window that looks out into what might have once been a courtyard, however--looking out, it seems like the courtyard is a mess of dangerous-looking debris. 193: This first-floor room was once a laundry room--there's a table in the center for folding clothes, a few folding chairs scattered about, and a large sink that receives cold water. There's room enough for three washing machines and three dryers, but there aren't any machines. 194: The apartment door has been torn off and lost somewhere, but luckily the bedroom door is still perfectly intact and locks up acceptably at night--though it does mean a night without access to the bathroom, which is still in working order even if the water in the shower and sink are cold. The living room and kitchen area is completely emptied out, and the whole area looks rather dirty--perhaps these rooms were looted. The bedroom and bathroom are relatively intact, though, although there's no mattress for the metal bedframe. What furniture is left has been flung about haphazardly. A large chunk of the wall has been scraped off, revealing metal beneath. 195: A simple-looking apartment--there's a living room, a kitchen with a small table, and two bedrooms. The smaller bedroom looks to be done up for an adult, while the larger one seems to be done up for a child who loves purple. Someone has drawn stars and missiles in purple gel pen in the child's room. The bathroom shower works, though the water is cold. 196: Only a half-ruined bathroom remains of this apartment. The plumbing doesn't even work, unfortunately. The bathtub is ringed with brown-tinged red that doesn't seem to go away, no matter what's done to it. On closer inspection, there's an identically colored circle on the bottom of the tub. They and most of the tub have been blacked out with charcoal. 197: This house, completely buried in snow, is pitch black. All of the windows are covered with the weight of snow pressing in on them. The house itself consists of only one floor, but one can practically feel the snow above from the way the house creaks and groans at night. The building itself contains a living room, bedroom with a mattress, kitchen, and bathroom. The bathroom has a tub and sink that both work and receive hot water. 198: Though it's now in severe disrepair, this definitely used to be an apartment complex. Moving through it is nothing short of treacherous--in most places, the floor is rotten and unstable, if not outright missing. There's debris everywhere, limiting range of movement and drastically increasing the chance of injury. Navigating the building requires a lot of climbing, ducking, squeezing, and caution. In some places, it's impossible to advance without climbing or descending a staircase to get around the chaos on other floors. And of course, there's no real reprieve from the elements, as the wall of snow bears down completely on what's left of the structure. But there still seem to be some apartments intact that seal up at night. You'll just have to find them. This building does not provide safe overnight shelter unless a character is in one of the apartments that locks up at night. 199: Though the building itself isn't the largest, the high ceilings and information desk through the double doors make it clear that this is a museum. This area is clearly marked as the West Entrance. Occasionally, information pamphlets can be found naming this place as the Norfinbury Museum of Art. Surprisingly, most of the art has been left in the museum, and what hasn't been left still bears an informative plaque about the piece. None of the artist names are familiar, and nothing is dated any later than 2050. Unfortunately, probably due to the failed climate control, much of the artwork has degraded. What can still be made out seems to indicate that this museum had an eclectic collection of traditional Alaska Native art as well as pieces contributed by other artists living in Norfinbury. Some of the plaques indicate that the museum was dedicated to fully encompassing the diverse and creative spirit of the town. There appear to have been a few works addressing the protests, but the information on these is minimal compared to less political pieces. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FIVE, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." has been written on one of the walls and this mark appears to have been stained into the wall above the entryway. The building is bisected through the middle by the collapsed glass roof. Once buried in snow and rubble, a path has been carved through the mess, revealing the other half of the museum. Where the western hall seemed to degrade from neglect, it's very clear that the eastern hall has been purposefully destroyed. Glass display cases have been shattered, sculptures dissected, frames knocked to the floor and paintings shredded. Information plaques have been painted over or broken entirely. Graffiti covers the walls, even up near the high ceilings. It doesn't resemble traditional vandalism, though, the illustrations chaotic and abstracted even where they represent recognizable subjects. Eyes feature prominently, in various stages of abstraction and occasionally grotesque in appearance. Though often barely legible, the words "long live the prophet" are also recurring throughout. Continuing on, the East Entrance area is architecturally a mirror of the West Entrance, but it has been similarly ransacked. There's barely an inch of wall that hasn't been vandalized, and the only informational pamphlets have been ripped to tiny pieces. But at least the double doors can be opened. Many of the prophet eye symbols have been blacked out with charcoal, but not all of them. 200: It looks like the roof, once made of glass and probably, in the past, a very pretty location, has caved in, and a mountain of rubble, glass, and snow cut the museum in two pieces. Still, it's not an insurmountable mountain--it seems as if enough of it has been removed to get over to the other side of the museum. 202: It seems like a pitch black ruin of an apartment, but closer inspection reveals everything has been covered in very dark black paint. It seems to swallow up light. 203: A rather boring apartment, but maybe that's a relief. It has a living room, attached kitchen, two small bedrooms, and a bathroom. The whole thing is sparsely decorated, but there's a whole wall of the kitchen plastered in silly children's drawings. None are of particular note except that there are a lot of colors and it looks like some were traced from picture books. Rocket ships, motorcycles, and hot rods have been added to the drawings in gel pen. 204: All that remains of this apartment is half of the living room, but the door and walls are intact enough that it seals at night. There are countless stuffed animals and dolls littering the couch, single remaining armchair, floor, and end table. 205: A small, mostly intact apartment with a kitchen, living room, bathroom, and bedroom. Opening the closet reveals a bunch of empty plastic water bottles and food wrappers, and the stains on the floor look less than pleasant. Was someone trying to live in here? 206: It looks like a small war took place in this ruined apartment. There's dried blood everywhere, all the furniture is in countless pieces, and if you really want to search around, you may find teeth and bones mixed in with the dirt and the dust. 207: Everything that should be in this apartment has been removed long ago, leaving only the hollowed out remains of a living room, kitchen, bathroom, and bedroom. Well, there's still a working toilet, at least. In place of all the furniture are countless sand bags. They're extremely heavy, and can't be opened up: it seems like the sacks are made of some sort of flexible metal. The sand bags are positioned to make several trenches that seem to be guarding the bedroom. Inside the bedroom is a metal chair and desk, but nothing else. Eye symbols are spray painted on the metal desk. 208: A living room and kitchen, with the rest of the apartment all fallen apart and inaccessible. The whole thing is littered with graffiti: "THE PROPHET" and "THE HERETICS" are written over and over. There are chunks of wall removed all over the place, revealing metal wall and indicating the graffiti messages may have once been a little longer. 209: A mostly ruined apartment. The living room area is still accessible, though the door is ruined, making it unsafe to stay in overnight. The floor is scuffed and, on closer examination, seems to have claw marks and long-dried blood splattered across it. 210: This was probably some sort of janitor's closet. There aren't any windows and it's kind of cramped, but there's a couple of folding chairs to sit on and it's actually pretty clean, compared to the rest of the apartment. 211: It looks like this place was once taken over by spiders--in fact, the moment you walk in, you're likely to walk into a long-abandoned spider web. There are countless webs in the living room, which is all that remains of this apartment, and countless bits of dead insect exoskeletons and wings. There are even empty spider egg sacs! Luckily, there are no living spiders here. No matter what you do to this building, the webs and debris always seem to return. 212: A rotted out husk of an apartment--it looks like the snow got to this one, and everything is kind of mushy. It's a good thing these places are made of metal, because if not one might be in danger of-- Ah, there's actually a hole in the floor. There isn't even anything inside that hole except for a pit of deliberately sharpened metal bits and pieces too far down to reach. The hole has had its perimeter spray painted in bright blue spray paint. DANGER with an arrow pointing to the hole is also sprayed on the floor in bright blue spray paint. 213: The interior of this apartment looks as if it's been razed at some point in its past. The walls are charred and only the living room remains, an empty husk. There are two knife blades, missing their handles, driven into the wall about six feet up and five feet across from each other. They're driven in so deeply they bury themselves into the metal of the wall and are impossible to get out. Eye symbols have been drawn around the knife blades in charcoal, as if the knives have been driven into the symbols. 214: The ruined remains of an apartment on the second floor. Only a child's bedroom remains, as signified by the small bed frame and the faded, moldy pink bedspread sits on the floor. To get into this room, you have to crawl through a collapsed hole, but the room itself seems normal enough. 215: All that's left of this apartment is a bathroom. It doesn't even have a tub--all it has is a shower. The shower does have twenty minutes of hot water every day, though. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND EIGHTEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." and "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY-SIX, FOR ANY ASSISTANCE PLEASE CONTACT @LELRIC." have been written on a wall. 216: This first-floor area was clearly once an indoor swimming pool. It's empty now, of course, making the diving board extremely dangerous and the whole place a little eerie. It still smells like chlorine. The men and women's locker rooms are still accessible: they only have three showers each and a handful of lockers without locks, but the showers all work, even if the water is cold. There are eye symbols drawn all over the bottom of the pool in blue paint. 217: All that remains of this apartment is the living room. All the furniture is gone, but the floor is covered in dark, plush brown carpeting. There's a faux fireplace on the wall that has been converted into something of a shrine: in the center is a crude wooden carving of a human figure with an eye symbol drawn on the face, its only actual facial feature. It can't be picked up--anyone trying will find it's far too heavy to lift at all. There are very old bloodstains surrounding the altar. 218: This first floor office seems to have once been for the manager of the building. The room contains a simple-looking metal desk with a comfortable chair behind it, and on the other side are three somewhat less-comfortable but still cushioned chairs where people can sit and discuss apartment rentals, or something like that. 219: An intact second floor hallway, rather than an apartment. It has a door on either side of it, with the rest a ruined wreck. The two doors mean it locks up at night, though, and it keeps the cold out. 220: A completely empty room. The walls are light purple, and the floor is carpeted in a darker shade and miraculously dry, so it's not altogether awful to spend the night in. There are rows of empty shelves on the walls with doll stands glued to them. Neither the shelves nor the stands seem to be able to be destroyed. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND NINETEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." has been written on a wall. 221: This was an apartment once. Now it looks like a crude fortress, with all of the furniture broken into wood and metal bits and pieces and placed near the door as a crude barricade--not to keep people out, but to provide a good place to hide behind when people walk in. The small, single bedroom has three mattresses on the floor, with no sign of any furniture. The mattresses have seen better days even by Norfinbury's standards, but it's better than sleeping on the floor and too cold for bedbugs. At least the toilet still works, even if the various faucets don't. "ALPHONSE ELRIC, DAY TWO HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN. IF YOU NEED ANY ASSISTANCE, PLEASE CALL @LELRIC." has been written on a wall. 222: There's a lot of shattered glass in this apartment, probably from former windows that are now crushed beneath the crumpled up walls that make this whole apartment rather triangular. The glass has been cleaned up, though, for the most part--it's difficult to get everything, but things are much neater now. Still, the door is intact enough that you can spend the night here. Only the living room and bathroom are still there, and the whole place groans and creaks uncomfortably, but you'll probably be fine. 223: Only a living room and bathroom remain here: there's no furniture here, though at least the toilet works. Eye symbols are drawn all over every inch of the floor, walls, and ceiling. 224: This looks like it might have been a lobby once. The area that once led to the front door has collapsed, however, but the fact that there's a door separating it from the rest of the apartments means it counts as a serviceable shelter. It's a fairly large, if empty, area to hang out in. There are a few wooden benches to sit or sleep on, and a bunch of square post boxes for various apartments. You can get around to the other side, but there isn't usually anything in any of them. 225: A complete ruin of an apartment devoid of anything at all except the countless eye symbols that cover the walls, floor, and ceiling. Many of the symbols have been torn up and removed, revealing metal wall beneath. 226: Only the kitchen is left of this apartment. All of the appliances are missing, of course. The water works, but it's cold and tastes metallic. This water is contaminated with lead. 227: An actually fairly intact apartment. It has a combined living room and kitchen, a bathroom, a bedroom, and a small linen closet. Most of the apartment seems normal enough. There's all the expected furniture--there's a mattress in the bedroom and the kitchen has an island with a few wooden stools lined up to sit at and eat. In the linen closet, however, are countless jars of preserved human eyeballs. They're glued to the shelves. Eye symbols have been carved into the shelves. 228: A ruined apartment. There are rooms, certainly, but it's impossible at this point to tell which room had which function. There isn't any furniture here, but "LONG LIVE THE PROPHET" is written all over the walls in red paint. 229: This was probably actually a balcony once--a miraculously intact glass door provides the entrance to this area, which consists of a pocket of wood and metal that encloses it on all sides and a metal fence enclosing the small space. It's not much, but it'll keep monsters and some of the cold out. 230: A technically intact apartment in the sense that it closes up at night. Everything is a ruin except for the bathroom, however, so really if you want to stay here you're stuck crowding into a bathroom that wasn't meant to fit more than a single person at a time. You can fit four or five if you're okay with hanging around in the shower, though, and the water still works! It's only cold water, though. 231: This was definitely a laundry room once, judging by the now gutted areas where washing machines and dryers would have been. There's something of note here, though: an old-fashioned washer. It can't be removed from the room, as all the parts are stuck to the floor or chained to the wall, but it all works just fine! It's better than nothing, right? Surely someone knows how to use this thing. 232: Only half this apartment remains--a hallway, a bedroom, and a bathroom--but it locks up at night. The bathtub is covered in rust, so it's probably best not to try and take a bath here. 233: A small, single-story house. It's very cold and dark, buried under snow as it is, and the whole place feels a bit lonely. It has a small living room, kitchen, and single bedroom. There's a mattress, but no blankets. Oddly, there's no bathroom. 234: A hollowed-out ruin. This building definitely caught fire at some point in the distant past, and the ashes still swirl around on the ground. Still, it's not dangerous now, and it seems like there are a few dust-covered items to be found if you check closely. | |||