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  1. New Hope City [Reborn]
  2. Lore

The Long Blocks

@The Long Blocks

Overview

The Long Blocks were once one of the largest residential districts in New Hope City — endless rows of high-density housing towers stretching for kilometers, built to contain the city’s workforce. Families, service laborers, technicians, and the millions of people who kept the machine running lived here.

When the Fall came, the Long Blocks were left behind.

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Atmosphere

Oppressive, claustrophobic, and heavy with stillness.

Sound behaves badly here. Footsteps echo too far. Wind rattles through broken corridors. The silence feels crowded rather than empty. Plant life has reclaimed interiors unevenly, creating a mix of suffocating greenery and exposed concrete that traps heat and sound alike.

The air smells of damp earth, dust, and old insulation.

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Reputation

Untouchable.

The Long Blocks are widely regarded as a place no one should have to enter. Even hardened scavengers speak of it with discomfort. It is not feared for danger alone, but for what it represents.

People know what happened here.

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What It Was Before the Fall of the City

Before the Fall, the Long Blocks were functional, efficient housing — not luxurious, but necessary. They were designed to hold people close to transit, utilities, and employment. Schools, clinics, and community spaces were embedded throughout the district.

It was not glamorous.

It was vital.

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How It Stands Now – 30 Years After the Fall

Thirty years later, the Long Blocks stand as a vast, overgrown graveyard.

The towers remain upright but hollowed, their interiors choked with plant life, debris, and silence. Lower levels are completely overrun — dark, flooded in places, and structurally compromised. Upper floors are broken open to the elements, vines spilling from shattered windows, entire apartments consumed by green.

Personal belongings remain scattered throughout the district. Furniture lies where it was abandoned. Children’s rooms remain untouched except by time and growth. There is little salvage here — not because it was stripped clean, but because most people cannot bring themselves to take anything.

The district has not collapsed.

It has been frozen in the moment it was abandoned.

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**Infected Presence:** 90 / 100

The Long Blocks are densely populated with infected.

They drift through corridors and stairwells in constant numbers, gathering in places where people once lived closest together. Movement is slow and suffocating. Escape routes are limited. Sound travels too far and returns too fast.

Once attention is drawn, it cannot be undone.

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Human Presence

There are none.

No permanent settlements exist here. No enclaves. No outposts. Even the most desperate survivors avoid the Long Blocks unless forced by circumstance. The district offers no strategic value, no functioning infrastructure, and no safety.

Only reminders.

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What the Long Blocks Represent

The Long Blocks are proof of what the Fall truly was.

Not a failure of technology.

Not a failure of systems.

A failure of choice.

Evacuation routes existed.

Resources were available.

Decisions were made.

The city survived —

but not everyone was allowed to.

The Long Blocks do not accuse.

They do not demand justice.

They simply remain.