The City: a bustling, dense urban area full of people, tall buildings, businesses, government offices and limited parking (except for our heroes). |
Green Lantern (2011): The license plate on Hal's car reads "Coast City", the fictional city where the comics are set. However, since US cities don't get ... |
The No Communities Were Harmed trope as used in popular culture. Fictional cities and occasionally countries are often obvious stand-ins for Real Life ones. |
Examples: · Gotham City (Batman) · Metropolis (Superman) · Central City/Keystone City (The Flash) · Opal City (Starman) · Fawcett City/Fairfield (Captain Marvel) ... |
A location in a work of fiction that is never named onscreen, instead being addressed with a nickname, a generic term, or nothing at all. |
A large group of people moves around, carrying tents, large carts or other shelters either in disassembled form or by hauling them around on wheels. |
The Absurdly Cool City trope as used in popular culture. In fictional settings, authors often decide to make great cities for their work. |
Everytown, America is a usually fictional town or small city containing pastel suburbs, a single elementary/High School (depending on how old the main ... |
A fictional country in an otherwise real-world setting. May be a Fictional Counterpart to a Real Life country, or may be created whole-cloth as a example of a ... |
When a country is a city-state, ie the city is the country. Although this can be justified by the country being small (eg Monaco, Vatican City, Singapore), |
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