Scribe
Legend
Legendary LAN party. We'll never reproduce the conditions that produced this!
Brings back some true gamer degenerate memories. A lost age.
Legendary LAN party. We'll never reproduce the conditions that produced this!
Did you swat them on the nose with a rolled-up Chessex battlemat?When I ran tabletop RPG events at our local conventions, I always made a point to say to my DMs on the first day, "Remember, some people come here because, for their $50, they're guaranteed a table, and they have sufficiently annoyed every gamer they know with their odious personalities that nobody they know in regular life will play with them. If they're too much for you, send them to my table. I will deal with them."
The population is that high only because of the farm workers needed to work the fields, not because there are places to go and things to do. If you want to reach places that are somewhere, you have to travel for a long time to get to them.O rly?
Looking it up, it seems California's Central Valley has a population density of 155 people per square mile. It may be empty as compared to LA. But, there are 28 entire states in the US with lower population density than that! Basically, more than half the states are more empty than the Central Valley. There are five states (North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, and Alaska) with less than ONE TENTH the population density of the Central Valley.
And, besides that, CA, as a whole, is a cultural and economic powerhouse. The Central Valley is the middle of somewhere, because CA is somewhere, in a way that, say, the middle of North Dakota just isn't.
Every time I've been to Trona, I am sure I have made a wrong turn hours back and have just been driving through the desert aimlessly before I finally start seeing signs for it.The population is that high only because of the farm workers needed to work the fields, not because there are places to go and things to do. If you want to reach places that are somewhere, you have to travel for a long time to get to them.
Having lived in and driven around California, there are definitely parts that feel in the middle of nowhere.
I lived in Visalia, a city in the Central Valley, for a bit and once I was driving someone about an hour to Kettleman City, a small town that's mostly a big truck stop. When we got onto a small highway crossing farmland I realized we were low on gas. I figured we'd fill up at the next station. We kept driving and driving and driving... No gas. Finally I saw a little town off the highway. I turned off and I was driving around. There was literally nothing open, nobody walking around, just closed stores and a little cul-de-sac. I saw a guy hosing leaves off the sidewalk. I parked and I asked him if there was a gas station in town.
He looked at me and shook his head and said, very slowly, "No... no... not here..."
If that doesn't give you the feeling of the middle of nowhere, I don't know what does!
Another time I went on a road trip driving randomly around California. I turned east from the coast and drove through the mountains. I was passing oil derricks... I stopped at a little diner. When I sat down at the counter, the waitress asked, "Who are you?"
The diner was basically only patronized by guys from the oil derricks.
The rest of the trip was like that as I drove out to Barstow and other tiny towns surrounded by dry mountains or desert.
Barstow is "the big city" people in Trona travel hours to get to, hilariously.“We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold.”