Population: 800,000
Largest City: Dodge City
Home, home on the range,
Where the deer and the antelope play;
Where seldom is heard a discouraging word
And the skies are not cloudy all day.
Introduction
Of all the nuclear powers that participated in the Great War, only India and the United Kingdom were able to preserve the continuity of government. The United States tried with an earnest effort, but only maintained undisputed continuity for roughly two years before the country was totally fractured. There are over fifty different factions in North America that either claim to be the United States of America or its rightful successor; many only make some kind of legal claim of continuity, while others explicitly use the “United States of America” title in some capacity. The largest of these, however, and the only major United States claimant to be a functioning democracy, is located in Kansas.
Brannigan’s Guard and the Dodge City War
Although eastern Kansas was badly struck by nuclear weapons, the west was entirely unscathed. Further benefiting Kansas’ situation was the survival of nearly one third of its state legislature, as it was not in session at the time of the Great War. The Lieutenant Governor and several state officials survived as well. Opting to triage the unsalvageable eastern half of the state, the Kansas rump government relocated to Dodge City.
Due to its central location and developed meat industry, it was designated by the Twin Falls government as one of the country’s primary Reconstruction and Recovery Centers. Accompanying the Kansas government was a multitude of refugees from east Kansas, Oklahoma, and Colorado, as well as a handful of federal employees. FEMA played a major role in the early days of the Dodge City government, helping resettle refugees into camps and rationing cattle and grain stockpiles as the Nuclear Winter set in.
More and more refugees began to stream in as the Nuclear Winter led to what is remembered as the Starving Time, but the Kansas rump government was not deterred. They cooperated closely with the rump State of Texas in Amarillo, which later served as the seat of the second postwar federal government. The situation was growing more dire and warlords began to emerge in the east of the state, but Dodge City remained optimistic. They even held elections in the summer following the Great War. All they had to do was ride out the nuclear winter, wait for the next harvest, and march east to restore order to the rest of the state. Alas, it was not to be.
The second wave of secondary strikes hit Amarillo, among other targets, thirteen months after the Great War began. The last remnants of the Amarillo federal government fled to Dodge City. The prewar House of Representatives had been reduced to three members, while the prewar Senate was totally annihilated, though a handful of postwar appointments followed them north to meet up. Kansas held dubiously legal snap elections for another Representative and two Senators to bolster the size of the tiny federal government.
Immediately upon his arrival to Kansas, Texas Representative John Ingersoll, a Republican and postbellum appointee by Amarillo President Oscar Zinn, unilaterally declared himself the Acting President of the United States. Three days later, he tried to legalize his move by strongarming the six other members of the House of Representatives into voting for him as the Speaker of the House and Acting President. The move was criticized by many, especially among the Kansas government, but few wanted to risk an open power struggle in such a time of crisis. All agreed that America needed strong, undisputed leadership going forward. They would not receive it.
The hastily-established Ingersoll administration faced the worst refugee crisis in American history, rivalling that of Loveland, Colorado, Lafayette, Louisiana, and Green Bay, Wisconsin. Dodge City’s prominence as the country’s largest Reconstruction and Recovery Center and provisional capital of the United States only drew in more and more refugees during the darkest days of the Starving Time. Kansas’ once–impressive food stockpiles had been depleted. The refugees, starving and overcrowded, began to riot in their camps, and violence spilled out into the streets. If Ingersoll didn’t act fast, he would have a revolution on his hands, yet he didn’t have the resources to handle it.
Faced with such a crisis, John Ingersoll did what any sensible politician would do. He fled. He abandoned his increasingly untenable position in Kansas and relocated the federal government to Midland, the provisional capital of Texas. He took most of the federal government with him, leaving behind token remnants to maintain an illusion that he was not simply abandoning the state. The remaining federal presence consisted of Kansas’ national Congressmen, the already-present FEMA authorities, and David Brannigan, the Acting Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, who had been tasked with single-handedly handling the Dodge City refugee crisis.
Brannigan knew that he had been offered as a sacrificial lamb, meant to take the fall for Ingersoll. He knew that he had to act fast, or the hungry and desperate masses would revolt and eat him—maybe literally. Yet there was no food remaining in Dodge City’s silos; what little grain stocks remained were emptied out and taken to Midland when Ingersoll evacuated. Feeding these refugees was simply an impossible task, but pacifying them might not be.
Approaching the equally-panicked Kansas government, Brannigan came up with a plan. In a widely publicized address, he told the public that there was no food left. The federal government had betrayed them, so he said, and had taken the food to Midland, leaving the people behind to starve. As the supposed only remaining Cabinet member who did not abandon the people, he was committed to rescuing them from starvation. Brannigan called on the people to take up arms under his leadership and invade Texas to reclaim the food. With the backing of the federal and state authorities in Kansas, he proclaimed himself the President of the United States of America and declared war on the illegitimate, traitorous government in Midland.
David Brannigan’s desperate bid to redirect the aggression of the starving masses towards an outside enemy and away from himself actually worked. His new National Guard, colloquially known as “Brannigan’s Guard,” marched south into Texas by the millions, with nothing more than tattered armbands to indicate their allegiance and often little more than knives and pikes to arm themselves. Most of these unlikely soldiers starved. Most who did not were slain in battle. But this army was whittled down into a small core of hardened soldiers, deeply loyal to President Brannigan. Moreover, every death meant less mouths to feed, while those who lived were now Ingersoll’s problem.
The Dodge City army grew, while Ingersoll marshaled his forces to respond to the growing threat; and thus the Dodge City—Midland War began. Neutral powers throughout the country scrambled to cut ties with both governments and promote a third-party national government of their own. The result was the pitifully impotent Walla Walla Government; even if it were strong enough and influential enough to put the country back together, Walla Walla was destroyed a mere two months into its formation in the Third World War’s last nuclear strike. The rest of the country fell into anarchy and warlordism, and the United States has remained disunited and war-torn ever since.
United States of America (Dodge City)
Capital: Dodge City
Classification: Federal Legacy (Federal rump government)
State of Kansas
Capital: Dodge City
Classification: State Legacy (State government)
Allegiance: United States of America (Dodge City)
When the Starving Time finally came to an end, David Brannigan formalized his rule by convening the state and federal government and holding the first Dodge City Congress. Concurrent with this Congress were the first national elections, in which Brannigan and the Republican Party (which had been retooled to orbit around him) won in a landslide victory. Affirming his power by riding a wave of militant populism, Brannigan favored a restoration of democracy rather than suppressing it, as other factions did. Since the 1st Dodge City Congress, the Dodge City government has held regular state and national elections, though the government remains in a state of perpetual emergency and habeas corpus along with certain parts of the Constitution are suspended.
Following the 1st Dodge City Congress, the State of Oklahoma in Guymon (already under de facto military occupation by Brannigan’s Guard) and the reorganized State of Nebraska in McCook petitioned to join the Dodge City government. The 2nd Dodge City Congress was held soon after, resulting in the formation of the Dodge City Convention, an association of all loyal states that participate in the Dodge City government. Foreign powers who do not recognize the Dodge City government, or wish to refer to it in neutral terms to avoid confusion, often use the term “Dodge City Convention” to refer to the entire USA-DC.
After years of bitter warfare, Brannigan’s Guard, supplemented by a growing professional army, pushed steadily southward into Texas and New Mexico. Both states were admitted into the DCC; New Mexico joined voluntarily (though under coercion by the occupying military, much like in Oklahoma), while the Texas government was directly installed by the federal government in Perryton before being relocated to Pampa.
Though Midland had the more professional military and initially greater industry, Dodge City wore out the Texas regime through superior leadership; Midland, meanwhile, was paralyzed by Ingersoll’s frantic purges, which triggered mass defections to Dodge City or other factions. The war ground down into a stalemate, until an armistice was finally signed. The Midland government subsequently collapsed, leaving Dodge City as the undisputed master of the Great Plains.
Victorious Dodge City was also joined by a reorganized State of Colorado in Burlington, as well as remote governments in Vernal, Utah, Riverton, Wyoming, Winner, South Dakota, Columbia, Missouri, Quincy, Illinois, and a multitude of local governments. They also host two state governments-in-exile: one for Arkansas and another for Louisiana. Dodge City’s Congress consists of fourteen Representatives and twelve Senators for the continuous DCC states (the congressional districts were redrawn during the 3rd Dodge City Congress), three Representatives from the remote states with voting rights (South Dakota, Missouri, and Illinois), and four non-voting remote Representatives (Utah, Wyoming, Arkansas, and Louisiana). The remote states do not have any representation in the Senate, and their seats remain ceremonially vacant until reunification can be achieved.
Dodge City politics are dominated by the center-right Republican Party, which holds most of the House of Representatives, the entire rump Senate, and all six of the contiguous state governments. Still, three other parties exist and are represented at the state and local level: the center-left Democrats, the left wing Progressive Party, and the far-right Constitutional Patriot Party. Though Republicans dominate at the national level, Republican primaries are open and hotly contested between party subfactions. Kansas is the most liberal state in the Dodge City Convention, with the largest Democratic presence in the realm and the DCC’s only elected Progressive Party official (the Mayor of Liberal, funnily enough). Nonetheless, the Republican Party is still the strongest in the state.
While Republicans and Democrats can be found throughout the country, only the USA-DC has something resembling the prewar two party system. The Republicans are pro-military, pro-unification by force, moderately pro-privatization, moderately socially conservative, and are intense civic nationalists. They favor a strong national government for the sake of reunification, want a strong and effective penal system, and are supportive of the government’s emergency measures, such as the abolition of term limits and suspension of habeas corpus. The Democrats are moderately socially liberal, anti-clerical, more open to reunification by negotiation, less interested in economic privatization, and more skeptical of the government’s emergency measures. Most Democrats run on a policy-based platform, claiming to offer better long-term results than the Republicans, which doesn’t sway most voters, who are more concerned with the present.
The Progressives offer a more solidly left-wing platform that resembles the more radical members of the antebellum Democrats. They are strongly focused on social issues, which are not of much concern to the mostly white, center-right population who are more concerned with post-apocalyptic issues such as rationing, public utilities, and conscription. Their main supporters are disaffected youth and fringe groups like the Neo-Satanists, and the main issue that appeals to voters is their apprehension of far-right Christian Nationalists. The Dodge City government’s conflict with Christian militias and survivalists has given it an anti-clerical bent even among the Republicans, setting it apart from the old Republican Party, who used to rely on Evangelical Christian support.
Staunch Christians within the USA-DC often flock to the Constitutional Patriot Party instead, the third-largest party in the country and the fastest-growing after the Democrats. The CPP is a broad coalition of far right elements with vastly differing views and policy goals, mostly held together by a shared Christian belief and intense nationalism. State policy views vary from reconciliatory doves who feel the government is too harsh on survivalists to extreme warhawks who wish to re-establish a nuclear weapons program. Economic views vary greatly as well. The CPP mostly serves as a spoiler for Republican elections, trying to influence the increasingly anti-clerical government to take Christian interests into consideration.
Living conditions are high by wasteland standards. Unlike the days of the Ingersoll regime, food security is good. Most towns have electricity in government buildings, and some towns are almost entirely electrified. Dodge City itself is in the top five largest cities in the country, with over 100,000 inhabitants. The USA–DC is a major agricultural producer with a strong and growing industrial base. Unlike the vast majority of the country, where the economy is either anarchic and barter-based or almost entirely state-run, Dodge City has both a strong public and private sector. Some corporations, such as Promethean Energy and Republic Enterprises, even have branches in other states and factions.
There does exist a growing concern over the influence such corporations now have over the government and economy. For all of Dodge City’s strengths, its shortcomings remind many of its citizens of the issues suffered by the United States prior to the Great War. One of the most controversial aspects of the USA-DC is its “relocated persons” designation. Immigrants to Dodge City from other factions and the residents of newly-conquered factions receive the status of “relocated person,” suspending most of the rights due to them as American citizens. In the early days of the Dodge City Convention, relocated persons made up the majority of the population, though now the rate has fallen below 25%. Still, this prevents hundreds of thousands of Americans under Dodge City rule from voting and denies them many legal rights and economic opportunities.
Despite their preeminent position on the Great Plains, the USA-DC finds itself in an increasingly difficult position to expand. In addition to the long, grinding war with Midland, Dodge City has found itself intermittently at war with the Road Warriors, United Indian Nations, Colorado Republic, Heartland Social Republic, and East Kansas Free State, as well as many smaller warlord factions. The mysterious government facility underneath Black Mesa, Oklahoma has also long evaded their grasp, despite multiple ill-fated attempts to retake it.
The current state policy venture of the USA-DC is its ongoing war with the Colorado Republic. Their primary goal is to capture Colorado’s silver mines, which will allow them to back their inflated fiat currency—the US Dollar, which is colloquially called the Dodge City Dollar—with valuable precious metal. This has long been the ambition of incumbent President Ron Haldeman, the four-term successor to David Brannigan. Meanwhile, to the south and east, Dodge City is growing increasingly involved in a cold war between itself, Aztlan, and the Kingdom of the Ozarks over the oil and gas fields of Oklahoma.
Free and Sovereign State of Kansas
Capital: Marysville
Classification: Special Case (Heartland state government)
Allegiance: Heartland Social Republic
Though eastern Kansas was triaged, the northeastern end of the state remained under the control of a handful of government officials who refused to evacuate; mostly mayors, Sheriffs, and county administrators, but one state legislator took control of Marysville to rule as a legitimist dictator. His “Kansas Security Bloc” was later conquered by Brendan Wagner’s Nebraska Pacification Army, and its remnants were incorporated into the newly-arising Heartland Social Republic.
When Wagner made the switch from neo-feudalism to his idiosyncratic Heartland Theory ideology, he devolved a certain amount of power to a unified Kansan administration: the Free and Sovereign State of Kansas. This didn’t involve some controversy—Brown County and Riley County swore allegiance to Dodge City before Wagner took them over—but the USA-DC was too preoccupied with their war in Texas to do more than protest. Heartland Kansas may be small and rural, but the town of Manhattan does contribute the minds of Kansas State University to the Republic, and the continuous NEZ stretching from Junction City to Topeka to Kansas City provides the regime with a natural, defensible frontier in a region otherwise devoid of strong geographic features.
One old Kansan faction that’s retained its autonomy since Wagner’s centralization reforms is the Knights of St. Mary, a Catholic military order of dubious canonicity. Its origins lay in the town of St. Marys, a city defined by its strong traditionalist Catholic presence. Not just any Roman Catholics, the inhabitants of this city belong to the Society of St. Pius X, a religious fraternity whose canonical status is itself in dispute. The Knights were founded first as a militia to defend the town from warlords, but expanded in power and influence as people flocked to them for protection against the rising tide of neo-Satanism. The Knights are made up of SSPX-attending Catholics and has the endorsement of SSPX, but some non-SSPX Catholics can be found among their ranks.
Though Brendan Wagner was a devout Methodist, he saw the utility that an alliance with the Knights could bring—especially given the disillusionment that many Christians were starting to express with the secular Dodge City government. To capitalize on their support, Wagner granted them special rights that none of his other neo-feudal subjects enjoyed. The HSR in general has promoted traditional Catholicism and propped up SSPX as a key supporting leg of his new social order, marrying political populism with religious traditionalism.
Today, the Knights of St. Mary—often just called “the Crusaders,” stand alongside the state army as a strong paramilitary force with significant political influence in Heartland Kansas. This has caused some trouble for them, as there are members of the Order that live beyond the Heartland borders and come to blows with other factions, notably the Satanist Emancipation Council and the USA-DC. Were it not for larger foes in Dodge City and Iowa, the HSR would simply crush the Satanists here and now. For the time being, however, they sit and wait, and allow SSPX to hinder their spread.
Abilene Special Administration
Capital: Abilene
Classification: Legitimist Warlord (Rogue law enforcement regime)
The Abilene Special Administration is a small city-state under the rule of a tyrannical strongman who was once a Sheriff’s deputy. A nuclear exclusion zone to the east shields them from Dodge City, but the HSR and Satanists still present a threat. They’re aligned with the Cattlemen’s Alliance in a loose coalition of warlords who have so far preserved the independence of central Kansas.
Cattlemen’s Alliance
Capital: McPherson
Classification: Legitimist Warlord (Vigilante army)
The Cattlemen’s Alliance is a vigilante army that maintained law and order during the period of anarchy that followed the Kansas government’s withdrawal to Dodge City. Out of all the vigilante regimes that can be found across the country, the Cattlemen are one of the most well-organized and upright, with their own rudimentary law code. Though they don’t recognize the East Kansas Free State, they have at least civil relations with the regime in Parsons and understand the valuable role they serve in keeping both Dodge City and the Satanists at bay.
To that end, the Cattlemen have orchestrated a big tent, multi-factional alliance including the Abilene Special Administration, the Christian Patriot Militia, and Warlord, Inc. Aside from the CPM, they aren’t especially fond of their newfound allies, but they understand the need for smaller factions to stick together and form a united front against the larger powers. The Cattlemen have hopes of solidifying this coalition into something more permanent, possibly its own faction, but it will take clever diplomacy and some good luck to pull it off.
Christian Patriot Militia
Capital: Marion
Classification: Right-wing Ideological Faction (Right-wing militia regime)
Marion County initially fell under the control of the skeleton crew of US Army Engineers who managed the county’s water reservoir. Following the Kansas government’s retreat to Dodge City, the Engineers abandoned Marion, leaving it behind for the county sheriff to defend.
Elsewhere in east and central Kansas, chaos reigned in the wake of the government’s withdrawal. Masses of refugees from Wichita, Topeka, Lawrence, and Kansas City organized along the lines of warlord gangs and fought amongst each other. One such band was the Christian Patriot Militia, founded by an antebellum lone wolf abortion clinic bomber who came out of hiding to wage his war in the open. He came into conflict with the Neo-Satanists, whose meteoric rise led to the Militia’s initial defeat and exile from east Kansas.
The westward-bound Militia found a new home in Marion. Allying with the sympathetic Sheriff, they defended the county and its reservoir from the roving Satanist armies, which were growing increasingly organized and consolidated into the Satanist Emancipation Council. After the Sheriff’s death, the Militia became the sole authority responsible for Marion County’s defense. The CPM continues to wage a low-intensity war with the SEC and is allied with the other three central Kansan powers for the sake of self-preservation.
Warlord, Inc.
Capital: Newton
Classification: Warlord (Local warlord gang)
Twin Falls originally designated Newton as a third class Safe Zone, meant to take in refugees from Wichita, Hutchinson, and El Dorado and function as an island of stability among the Kansan anarchy. The plan was for Newton to hold out and wait for the Dodge City state government to rebuild its strength before it could return and link up with the beleaguered city. Instead, the state government’s withdrawal and its failure to provide promised supplies to Newton triggered widespread panic among its civilian population. While Dodge City could weaponize its discontents and send them off to be Texas’ problem, lonely Newton had no such opportunity and succumbed to refugee revolution.
The initial rebel government, which proclaimed itself the true State of Kansas, was short-lived and fell to a series of ephemeral and increasingly-brutal warlord regimes. Newton’s “revolving door” period ended with the takeover of a charismatic sociopath who had enough of a sense of humor to name his regime Warlord, Inc. Fallout shields them from Dodge City and the East Kansas Free State, but the Satanists remain a major threat. The Warlord (that’s his official title), though not the most pious Christian, harbors a special hatred for the Satanists and is willing to join with the Cattlemen’s Alliance in a central Kansan coalition for mutual defense.
Satanist Emancipation Council
Capital: Emporia
Classification: Religious Faction (Organized Satanist warlord state)
The Satanist Emancipation Council is America’s largest faction of dedicated, dogmatic Neo-Satanists. Most Satanist practitioners are simply degenerate heathens who want to shock and terrify the mostly Christian population. Most Satanist warlords are either true degenerates or cynics who simply use it as an excuse to plunder and rape. Council President Landon Quinn, however, really believes what he preaches, for better or for worse.
Neo-Satanism, also called Haggmannist Satanism, is a New Religious Movement that emerged out of northern Texas during the Starving Time. Its founder was Martin Haggmann, a Dallas refugee and a prophet who lost all those who were dear to him after the Great War. He turned to oriental mystic practices to ease his anguish, and claimed to have been visited by Satan one night. He founded his own Church of Satan (referred to as Neo-Satanism to avoid confusion with previously-existing Satanist movements) and preached that the Lord God, although real, was an evil and cruel being who created humanity to watch it suffer. Satan, he argued, was mankind’s liberator and savior. They believe that humans must resist God by “doing good, helping others, and recruiting other humans to the cause” (for their own definition of “good”). They are strong advocates of “free love” and believe that most traditional institutions, such as marriage (or at least the Christian understanding of it), were created by God to increase human suffering.
There is no unified Neo-Satanist organization, which is only structured at the local level, and thus its beliefs, structure, and practices vary extremely greatly. Some Neo-Satanists are pacifistic, others are exceedingly violent and bloodthirsty (and a handful practice human sacrifice). Neo-Satanists can generally be found across the Great Plains, especially in eastern Kansas and the Texas Panhandle, but they are a small minority everywhere they can be found, except for the territory of explicitly Satanist factions. Other varieties of Satanists can be found throughout the country in small numbers, but east of the Mississippi River they generally deviate away from the Haggmannist model; Midwestern Satanists are typically Theistic Satanists and often perform human sacrifices and real occult rituals.
The most organized and dedicated Neo-Satanist bodies are the SEC in Emporia and the Temple of Satan in Dodge City, who have official leadership, an established doctrine, and formal rites. The Council originated as a loose coalition of like-minded Satanist gangs and warlords, but gradually came under the control of Landon Quinn, the Council President. Under his leadership, the Council has transitioned into legitimist government with a surprisingly professional army. They’ve reached a tense understanding with the East Kansas Free State, which dislikes their movement but has too many large enemies to afford another open conflict. Their main goals are to “liberate” central Kansas from the small warlords and reach some kind of concordat with the Haggmannist Temple of Satan in Dodge City to increase their influence abroad.
United States of America (Ottawa)
Capital: Ottawa
Classification: Warlord (Raider gang)
Ottawa is ruled by a bog-standard petty warlord who arose out of the east Kansas power vacuum. After David Brannigan’s ascension to the Presidency, the Ottawa warlord held a symbolic election in which only his fighters could vote, installing himself as the President of the self-proclaimed United States of America. Despite their lofty ambitions, this USA is waging a losing battle against the Satanists, and will likely have to either bow to the Jayhawkers in East Kansas or retreat into the Kansas-Missouri ash-lands to survive.
East Kansas Free State
Capital: Wellington
Classification: Legitimist Warlord (Neo-feudal regime)
The Kansas state government’s withdrawal to the west provided an excellent justification for dozens of petty warlords who could (rightfully) claim that the government abandoned them. The most powerful of these was in Wellington, ruled by a Fire Chief in command of a militarized fire department. This warlord band grew in strength into a larger army: officially, the East Kansas National Guard, but unofficially the Jayhawkers.
The Jayhawkers are known for their characteristic blue tunics and red boots, in the fashion of their 19th Century ancestors who fought for the Union in the Civil War. The Jayhawkers were but the nucleus of the regime in Wellington, however, which triumphed over the war-torn east and established the East Kansas Free State.
Had it not been hemmed in by fallout and the USA-DC, it might have been another Heartland Social Republic, but destiny was not quite so kind to East Kansas. Their propaganda rests on the twin pillars of abandonment by the Dodge City government and defense against the “East Kansas Anarchy,” an era deeply embedded in the Free State’s mythology. There is a populist bent to the Free State, but it is a far cry from the HSR and continues to follow the neo-feudal model. The Jayhawkers remain an intimidating, though ill-disciplined, sight throughout the region, projecting power into neighboring states through bootlegging and frequent raids. They are not the only armed force in the Free State, given its decentralized, neo-feudal nature, but they are the primary arm of the central state, inasmuch as East Kansas has one.
Evangelical American Republic
Capital: New Tulsa, Oklahoma
Classification: Religious Faction (Semi-theocratic republic)
Coffeyville is a city that’s frequently changed hands. Although never designated as a government safe zone, it effectively functioned as one throughout the whole of the Starving Time, recognizing the Dodge City government and relaying information to and from the State of Missouri. The city also incorporated the nearby City of South Coffeyville in Oklahoma across the state line during this period. Despite their proximity to the Free Stater stronghold of Independence, they were among the last cities in east Kansas to be conquered by the Jayhawkers.
Free State rule was eventually shaken off by the youth arm of the old town militia, which waged a successful guerilla campaign and held on to the city long enough for the Evangelical American Republic to arrive from Oklahoma and annex the city. The theocratic government dismissed the youth militia and restored civilian control to the town. Pro-Jayhawker elements still persist in Coffeyville, however, and profit off of bootlegging to subvert New Tulsa’s prohibition on alcohol. The most recent Mayor of Coffeyville, a corrupt ally of the Jayhawkers, was overthrown by rioting locals after a passing arms merchant sold them his entire stock. Now the city is under martial law, while New Tulsa scrambles to find a suitable replacement.
Index
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"The mysterious government facility underneath Black Mesa, Oklahoma has also long evaded their grasp, despite multiple ill-fated attempts to retake it." Prepare for unforseen consequences, Mr. Brannigan.
Have you considered making a population distribution map? That would be a very interesting way to visualize postwar America.
What happened to Oz?