Nefrit & Ktotut
Ever heard about that abandoned metro station that supposedly leads to a hidden cavern with ancient stuff? I stumbled on a rumor someone tried to map it last year—thought it might be the perfect mix of city oddity and old myths to dig into.
That sounds like a classic urban legend—most places like that end up being either old service tunnels or just rumors that get embellished. Still, if there’s any chance of a genuine cavern, the geology and the historical records would give us a better start than the rumor alone. Maybe we could look into old city plans or any recorded surveys. If it’s real, I’d prefer the data to the myth.
Nice, digging into the actual city plans sounds solid—though I’ll warn you, my map skills are more “hot‑spot hunting” than precise. Maybe we can hit up the archives and bring a friend who actually knows their way around survey data. Let’s keep it real, skip the myth fluff, and see what the concrete maps say.
Sounds good. I’ll grab the city archives and see if the maps mention any old tunnels. If we can get someone with survey experience on board, we’ll get the concrete data we need and leave the legends behind.
Sounds slick—I'll be the field guide, just don’t let me forget the key details, or we’ll end up chasing more ghosts. Let’s hit the archives and bring a survey pro; I’ll bring the curiosity, you bring the data. Let's make it real.
Alright, I’ll pull the latest municipal survey files and flag any references to uncharted passages. If the archives reveal a corridor, we can cross‑check it with geological reports. I’ll keep the focus on evidence and leave the ghost stories for later—if there’s any truth to it, it will show up in the data. Let's do it.
Sounds like a plan—grab the files, flag the weird spots, and let’s cross‑check the geology. I’ll be on standby, ready to turn any data into a real story. Let’s get to it.