Gray poisonous clouds lie low in Moral Ambiguity. Few can survive in this harsh climate. The unwary perish on the outskirts.
Prepared visitors wear gas masks and cover their mouths with black bandanas.
“People think there are monsters to slay and treasures to find in Moral Ambiguity,” says the Guide. “They want to become heroes. But the hollows of Moral Ambiguity hide nothing but danger — deep wells, holes, caverns, and crevasses. They simply are. Still, exploration for its own sake is often rewarding for the traveler. Beware the gassy swamps, mires, and quicksands. We’ll pass many skeletons. None from my tour groups, but others and sole wanderers.”
The mist of Moral Ambiguity passes over other lands. The mists may be thinner, but no less deadly. Denizens breathe in the air and find themselves filled with hate or a paralysis of love, the kind that prays and waits.
Non-human animals stay away from Moral Ambiguity. Their keen noses smell danger.
All of the animals, especially the rats, live in Moral Ambiguity live in the maze-shaped city of Puzzling. It’s a maze shaped city filled with rats. There are ponds in the center and fish try to figure out how to get from one pond to the other looking for fresh water. Leaping into the air.
The air here is murky and the water polluted. The streets are filled with excrement. People get lost and walk around in confusion so that they have no time for tasks like street cleaning. The windows in the city stay closed least they let in more of the foul air. The happiest denizens of Puzzling are those that find their way out or those who come for vacations to walk the streets and map the mazes.
Miss Emeline Traveler made a glorious map of Puzzling. It attracted many visitors, who became lost.
"When visitors leave, they take their knowledge of Moral Ambiguity and Puzzling with them, leaving the denizens lost again unable to figure out things on their own," says Miss Emeline.
"The plants of puzzling are carnivorous thorny vines," recounts Miss Doe Friend. "All foods are contained in hard to open shells and smell vile, so at first they seem inedible."
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