A Dollar General is no more cyberpunk or dystopian than a 7-11, or a Woolworth's. 7-11 seems comforting bc it's been a franchise chain since 1960s, and Woolworth's seems trad bc it was founded in 1879. Woolworth's was a "5 and 10 [ cent store ]."; dollar store before inflation https://twitter.com/dawtismspeaks/status/1424851238701633539 …
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3/ "the guy who is" dude, I live on a farm and raise my own food I haven't been in a 7-11 in decades I was speaking to OPhttps://twitter.com/JBlackwoodSays/status/1425192316889878530 …
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4/ how about country stores? that big jar of pickles and that barrel of crackers are, like, woah. dude! https://twitter.com/dawtismspeaks/status/1425183571208286209 …
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6/ maybe on THIS timeline...https://twitter.com/TheLumpenprole/status/1425186072246603777 …
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Doordash and uber seem rather cyberpunk. I mean, they aren't hitching rides with magnets on skateboards, but...
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MagnaPoon
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I see neither high tech nor low life.
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That being said the interface between advanced hellscape urbanism and it's surrounding hinterlands does seem like a cool and perhaps underexposed space. Corporate drone swarm enforcement of property rights on megafarms in the Midwest against redneck raiders.
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Self driving semis being hijacked by dumb teenagers along the interstate. Very fertile soil for someone with waaaay more talent and time than me.
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DG singularly undercuts several markets in ways that 7-11 (functionally a grocery store) doesn’t though, so it is relatively new in terms of corporate proliferation
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