peacefrog
peacefrog
76 / 6
27th Sep 2021
2nd Oct 2021
What if lost America was never lost? Here is what I think an American south traction city would look like. It runs on corn-based biofuel in giant tanks. It is quite small and heavy-duty. This isn't cannon by the way.
mmmoil autobus destroyable tractioncity mortalengines engine city murica

Comments

  • peacefrog
    peacefrog
    29th Sep 2021
    MamaSwiss: it's based off the 4 main books, I never watched the film as I thought it looked like a star wars rip off. They changed valentine's death and added laser guns for no reason. They also phantom of the opera-ed Hester Shaw.
  • MamaSwiss
    MamaSwiss
    29th Sep 2021
    Y'all know that movie Mortal Engines?
  • gamerdude1
    gamerdude1
    29th Sep 2021
    america: oil we need more of it
  • superbantom
    superbantom
    28th Sep 2021
    TimeSan, it was probably destroyed in the 60 minute war or is an antitractionist stronghold
  • 7shotsolo
    7shotsolo
    28th Sep 2021
    Timesan, here is why american traction cities dont exist in the canon series id:2792259
  • 7shotsolo
    7shotsolo
    28th Sep 2021
    its probably that anti-traction city in the first book. After all, Japan collided with Asia due to the 60 min war
  • peacefrog
    peacefrog
    28th Sep 2021
    True. Also what happened to Tokyo? I mean it's the biggest city in the world but it is never mentioned. I need a book where it's just a list of surviving citys and interesting facts and things about them.
  • 7shotsolo
    7shotsolo
    27th Sep 2021
    and also, then some other continent would have a Lost at it, like Lost Europe, Lost Africa, Lost Asia, you know.......
  • 7shotsolo
    7shotsolo
    27th Sep 2021
    If Washington, D.C still existed in Mortal Engines, then London would not be in the main plot because there is a chance that the traction city still has M.E.D.U.S.A or at lest something like that.
  • pab
    pab
    27th Sep 2021
    Looks a bit like a train, but whatever american traction-cities never truely existed.