The city in Liar Hell you have been relocated to is, like Tokyo F, based on the Tokyo city grid. In many places, looking at the real Tokyo is your best guide around it, as you see analogues of locations: a movie theater in the human realm is a movie theater here, but the movies shown differ, as do the patrons, as does the aesthetic. . . but still, there is a movie theater.
That said, many office buildings and government buildings are now, instead, film locations. Inside those, the sets might be set to look like most anything-- a set with everything in black and white, with the actors all in black and white make-up so no color leaks through, instead of filming with black and white film. Sets that look like the wild west, sets that look like Edo, game-show stages, etc.
The territory also expands far beyond Tokyo, but characters will find security will come and pick them up and return them to the hotel they're staying at if they attempt to go too far abroad-- your show hasn't been cancelled, you're just out for a brief break.
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Liar Hell's Tokyo is busy, bright, and contorted. Everything glows, all the windows blazing with kaleidoscopic light, high-rises done up with stained glass and wrought iron instead of impassive reflective surfaces and steel. The further up you look, the more they twist in your perception, becoming spiraled spires and gothic arches that create neon silhouettes. The sky above is in a perpetual night sky, but the stars wander like planets and airplanes rather than staying still in their orbits. In other words, the kind of place that gives you a headache.
CITY LAYOUT & AESTHETICS
That said, many office buildings and government buildings are now, instead, film locations. Inside those, the sets might be set to look like most anything-- a set with everything in black and white, with the actors all in black and white make-up so no color leaks through, instead of filming with black and white film. Sets that look like the wild west, sets that look like Edo, game-show stages, etc.
The territory also expands far beyond Tokyo, but characters will find security will come and pick them up and return them to the hotel they're staying at if they attempt to go too far abroad-- your show hasn't been cancelled, you're just out for a brief break.
-
Liar Hell's Tokyo is busy, bright, and contorted. Everything glows, all the windows blazing with kaleidoscopic light, high-rises done up with stained glass and wrought iron instead of impassive reflective surfaces and steel. The further up you look, the more they twist in your perception, becoming spiraled spires and gothic arches that create neon silhouettes. The sky above is in a perpetual night sky, but the stars wander like planets and airplanes rather than staying still in their orbits. In other words, the kind of place that gives you a headache.