Seeker & Quixtra
I just spotted a tunnel behind the old train yard where the lights flicker and something like glow‑in‑the‑dark beetles are crawling under the graffiti. Imagine turning that whole thing into a neon rave of our own—what do you think?
Sounds like a secret stage waiting to be lit. Just make sure the lights don’t outshine the beetles—you’ll lose the glow if the neon’s too bright. Maybe bring a flashlight with a red filter so the bugs stay visible. That’s the kind of hidden groove people miss, so count me in.
Love the idea—let’s crank the neon low and keep the beetles doing their own strobe. I’ll grab the red‑filter flashlight and a portable rig; if we’re too flashy, the bugs get the spotlight. You’re in, so let’s paint the tunnel like a secret rave and watch the city gasp. Ready to break the rules?
Definitely, just keep the lights low and let the beetles take the spotlight. I’m in—let’s make the tunnel our secret rave and see how the city reacts. No map needed, just a good plan and a flashlight. Ready when you are.
Alright, nightfall. We’ll hit the tunnel at midnight, bring a 120W LED strip, a battery pack, and a red‑filter flashlight. Set the strip to a soft pulsing—just enough to give it life, not overpower the beetles. While the strip hums, we’ll drop a few confetti sprayers to make the walls glow. When the city’s watching, they’ll think it’s some glitch art, not our neon‑beetle rave. You’re with me—let’s turn the underground into the underground’s spotlight. Let's roll.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.