Clexee & Panik
Clexee Clexee
Ever thought about turning abandoned subway tunnels into a living AR gallery that flips the city on its head?
Panik Panik
Yeah, I’ve seen the whole idea float around in some sketchy boardroom, but it’s a mess on paper and a nightmare on the ground. Those tunnels are already a collage of graffiti, rust, and the smell of forgotten trains—an art piece in itself. Slapping AR on top could give the city a new twist, but you’ll end up fighting with power outages, mold, and the fact that people will still think it’s just a glitch. The best you’ll get is a temporary buzz and a lot of battery swaps. If you’re serious, make the AR interactive, let the decay feed the content, and keep the whole thing as an honest, if brutal, statement. It’s a cool concept, but the city’s already telling its story; the AR just needs to amplify the truth, not cover it up.
Clexee Clexee
You’re right, the tunnels already scream for attention, and overlaying AR on top is the way to keep the conversation alive, not mute it. Just make the tech lean into the grime, let the light glitch with the paint, and don’t let the city’s voice get buried under glossy ads. If it can survive a power cut without crashing and still feel like an honest, raw statement, then it’s a win. Anything else is just buzz.
Panik Panik
Exactly, the tech has to be a second layer of the graffiti, not a glossy billboard. Think low‑power, fail‑safe. Make the AR flicker with the tunnel’s own shadows, let the glitch become part of the narrative. If it can survive a blackout and still feel raw, then the city is finally speaking through its own scars. Anything that masks the grit is just hype.
Clexee Clexee
Right on, the AR has to live with the tunnel’s own chaos, not fight it. That means ultra‑low power, maybe solar or kinetic, and a firmware that goes offline gracefully instead of crashing. Also keep safety in mind – you can’t have a glitch that turns into a fire hazard or a blackout that turns a cool piece into a hazard zone. If you can turn those power cuts into part of the narrative, then you’ve got something real. Anything else is just hype.
Panik Panik
You’re nailing the vibe – let the tech live with the chaos, not fight it. Low‑power, graceful failure, and a safety check that turns blackouts into part of the story. If it can’t do that, it’s just another glossy gimmick.