Bu Crescent Railway Station

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Bu Crescent Railway Station
VSB, lit.
AndyMatthews (talk) 00:09, 15 January 2022 (UTC)
Bu Crescent Railway Station

Shuttlebank [35,15]

Killinger Walk the Darknell Museum Thair Place
Look Road Bu Crescent Railway Station a factory
Fabian General Hospital the Buckrell Building William Avenue Police Department

Basic Info:

  • Train station. No trains are running.
  • Among the internal descriptions found in Railway Stations:
    • "Its platforms are empty, its departure boards blank, all trains having left the city during the evacuation."
    • "…a fire-damaged white-stone building surrounded by lawns. Behind railings, you can see railway tracks disappearing into the surrounding city."
  • This building can be barricaded normally.

Lu bu.jpg

Description

This is the headquarters of the famous ' Red Hare ' commuter rail service which had branches throughout the city of malton which was run by infamous Pornstar/Town Selectman Scotw. Survivors whom have looted the art exhibit inside the station can be seen dispatching zombies with their stolen Chinese halberds. This building was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1912. A homeless man who had tried to keep himself warm by sleeping near The Cholmondeley Hotel which was in flames, had his hobo sack catch on fire and he tried to put it out inside the station in a decorative fountain which was storing gasoline for an unknown reason. Men from the Bubcar Road Fire Station were unable to put out the flames, and the building was rebuilt by slave laborers from china which is very ironic if you think about it.

History

This railway station is named for legendary hero Lü Bu who was a military general and later minor warlord during the late Eastern Han Dynasty and Three Kingdoms era of China. According to the Records of Three Kingdoms, Lü Bu was a master in horseback riding, archery, and was thus known as the Flying General. His image as a handsome and mighty warrior wielding a ji known as the "Heaven Scorcher" on top of his steed Red Hare was later popularized by the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

Besides being matchless on the battlefield, Lü Bu was also notorious for having betrayed and slain two separate masters (who were both his adoptive fathers). He was perhaps most well-known for his amorous relationship with the most likely fictional Diao chan which led to his slaying of his adoptive father Dong Zhuo, the tyrannical warlord who held the puppet figurehead Emperor Xian in his control.

Lü Bu was eventually defeated and captured by Cao Cao in the city of Xio Pi. According to Liu Bei's suggestion, Cao Cao had Lü Bu hanged.

According to the notes of Romance of the Three Kingdoms, which corrects the fictional accounts of the novel, Lü Bu's execution took place in February, 199 AD.

Barricade Policy

According to the Shuttlebank Barricade Plan this building should be kept at VSB at all times.

Current Status