>You will never live in a cyberpunk dystopian future where everyone wears trenchcoats and eats noodles from a small outdoor ethnic restaurant in the rain
>What's the fucking point then
Also general cyberpunk appreciation/art thread
>You will never live in a cyberpunk dystopian future where everyone wears trenchcoats and eats noodles from a small outdoor ethnic restaurant in the rain
>What's the fucking point then
Also general cyberpunk appreciation/art thread
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Just go to Chinatown in London in October....
Just visit Seoul's seediest sectors during the monsoon season.
Problem solved.
Lmao south korea ain't cybepunk, it's closer to lovecraftian horror than cyberpunk, the girls are fucking cyborgs they can't live without surgries, they look awful and they eat 1 million dog every year literally worst than north korea
FPBP
Nah, man. Not even close. Seoul is a delightful city.
what does that mean?
>asking for a friend...
First post; best post.
Yes I do
Aw shit...my friend says that's really kind...
Bruh just go to Akibahara
HE SAY YOU BWADE WUNNER
Other than all the flair of cyberpunk, we prettymuch do live in a cyberpunk world, large corps that govern the economy, high level tech in the hands of few, climate disasters are on the rise and instead of a 3dVR metaverse we have a 2d metaverse in phones that suck our awareness
Yeah, but I think OP is trying to conjure up the 'coziness' aspect to cyberpunk. Yes, it's raining, but you're dry because you're in a cool hooded long coat. Yes, it's dark but everything around you is lit from below. Yes, the elements want to kill you but you're fighting against it by eating.
It's all about the coziness of what dystopian future depictions all have in common: that even though they're depicting something obviously less desirable than what we have today, they're designed by people who try to find the good in it.
No one designs a cyberpunk dystopian future based on what parts of the Congo look like today. They design it from the idea that as the environment gets more hostile, humans find more ways to counteract it within their own personal circle.
Hence the comfy trenchcoat: it's the ultimate symbol of protection against the elements, creating a personal space that is better than the outside, etc.
we're not that far off. Much closer than people realize.