WORLD.
The story of Dustbowl takes place in a loosely-defined alternate-history version of Earth in the 1950's. Though the exact details are neither fleshed out nor very important to the main story, the world history for Dustbowl would be most characterized by several points:
◥ The Great War was extended by several decades and eventually transitioned into a long period of tension between the United States and Russia, similar to the Cold War. World War II never occurred, and the damage that the US took during the Great War was extensive enough that it never fully recovered.
◥ The cathode-ray tube was never discovered. The technology necessary to commercially produce televisions and other similar devices has never been developed. Although primitive light-projection screens and motion-picture projectors exist, these technologies are expensive and not available to non-metropolitan areas.
◥ Diesel engines have been greatly advanced, resulting in the development of vehicles like hoverbikes. Though motor vehicles are still common in metropolitan areas, and many people use horses out of cities, the development of hover vehicles allows for scattered populations to exist more easily in areas like Dustbowl. Zeppelins and other primitive aircraft are also used for long-distance trade and transportation.
The entirety of the Dustbowl narrative takes place in the eponymous area of Dustbowl -- a dry, desert area located loosely in the American west. Defined by huge expanses of dry desert punctuated by oases and watering holes, it contains one notable metropolis -- an enormous, brightly-lit city by the name of Beacon. A popular trade-and-rest stop for long-distance zeppelins, it boasts a huge, diverse population and a flashy night-life.
Originally created by groups of wartime survivors, fugitives, and soldiers who'd deserted the army after long years of combat, the city thrives as an independant entity, free of any influence from the greatly-weakened national government. However, as the city grew larger and grew increasingly prosperous, the black market also grew at a proportional rate. Due to its starting point as a gather of vagabonds, the entire Dustbowl area lacks in any solid government or police force, protected only by a loose coalition of sheriffs and law enforcers who provide little help.
The Dustbowl region's best-known and perhaps darkest aspect is its huge slave trade. Due to the lack of any governing force and the spread-out population, as well the presence of an obscenely wealthy upper-class in the city, Beacon is the home of a thriving slave auction system. Raiders and thugs outside the city will often raid farming communities or travelers venturing out of the city to capture and sell off as slaves, either on these auctions or to individuals on a commission basis. Though some slaves are sold off on trade vehicles to other regions, most slaves live and die in the Dustbowl region, used for manual labor or entertainment by the wealthy upper class.
TECHNOLOGY.
Hoverbikes:
The most notable facet of technology in Dustbowl is probably the presence of hovervehicles -- most commonly hoverbikes. Though diesel-engine automobiles are still the choice mode of transportation for the rich in the city, hoverbikes tend to be popular among people who have to travel for long distances out of the city. The large expanses of flat, compact earth due to the dry climate means that hovercrafts tend to move very quickly, and with few obstacles. Furthermore, the scarcity of roads or other paths one is required to stay upon means that the lack of fine control involved in driving hoverbikes is less of a con that would be in a more urban environment.
Hoverbikes commonly come in two designs -- speedy and robust. Speedy models tend to have a more aerodynamic shape modeled after large-caliber bullets -- sharp points, wider back ends, designed to go as quickly as possible in straight lines. These are most commonly used by messengers and long-distance couriers who value speed and timeliness over all. Couriers who use speedy hoverbikes usually spend a great deal of time training, as the speedies are harder to control and must take extremely point-A-to-point-B direct routes at high velocities, which means more danger of collisions with any obstacles.
More common are robust models. Generally cylindrical in shape, with less of a focus on speed and more on general endurance, these models of hoverbikes are favored by people who want to make decent time but have a little more control over their routes. They require much less training to learn to ride, and it's not uncommon for people in the city to rent robust hoverbikes from firm at the outskirts of the city to go take joyrides out in the desert for a day. Still, they're popular among people who have to go outside of the city often. Due to their unwieldy size, most people who own hoverbikes will rent garage spaces to store them in when they're not in use.
Of course, driving a hoverbike has its own set of dangers. While they're much faster and streamlined than automobiles when out on the desert expanse, they're also dangerously easy to tip over or send crashing into the ground. Blowing even one of the high-speed impellers can completely cripple a hoverbike, and as a result, hoverbikes require a lot of maintenance and care between trips. Also, these bikes tend to have a strict limit on how much weight they can carry -- hoverbikes that can carry more than one person (and a small amount of luggage) are very rare. Still, the speed and efficiency they offer on long trips is almost always worth it to people who use them often.
Soysauce himself owns a second-hand robust-model hoverbike -- though he purchased the base from a junk dealer on a whim, he spent the next five years learning to fix it up and get it working. He finished modifying it just about the time that he was growing bored of staying in the city all the time and wanted to go back outside periodically, and so he took an immense liking to it. He usually keeps it in one of the outskirt garages, taking it out when he has courier or extermination jobs lined up. The speediness of his hoverbike has also proved a great asset to his hit-and-run tactics when it comes to combating slavers -- once he gets his bike running, he can often make a pass by his targets, spray a round of gunfire, zoom off, then circle back for a second strike.
After some waffling, Soysauce eventually named the bike Jonathan. |