Year 3021
In the year 3021, what remains of our existence?
Trillions of digital fragments — thoughts, photographs, written word and bits of information that survived the first primitive millennium. Anthropological digital researchers meticulously comb supermassive data libraries, accessing our web searches, microblogs, articles, images, and messages accessed or transmitted by the people of our time.
Is this all there is — black and white? Or is there more?
Our human story is unprecedented — who we were, what held our attention, our professed loves, rants and confessions. Our worst angels and best demons. And vice versa. So, too, must the analysis of our peculiar and historic moments be wholly unprecedented. We look back to times past and ponder aloud, “What were they thinking?” Future generations may have to guess.
Or will they?
Through a magicked portal, urbanites of the historical La Lune Parish have found themselves on the Lune Space station. At first, confused and disoriented, they soon work tirelessly to survive, desperately wanting to find their way back home. Home, however, would not be what they imagined it to be, after a millennium, much has changed. La Lune Parish, once lush and colorful, would now be stark, white and futuristic, not at all resembling what they left. The La Lune Parish urbanites will infiltrate the pristine white walls of La Lune City, bringing with them a little bit of what the world used to know, answers to complicated questions, culture and music and the metaphorical color the future was missing. La Lune City is as shocking to these urbanites as La Lune Parish is to a community an entire millennium into the future. Creeping into the underground, infiltrating military headquarters, urbanites from La Lune Parish weave into life in the future, alongside cyborgs, aliens and machines.
Where will you fit into this timeline?