[center][IMG]https://txt.1001fonts.net/img/txt/dHRmLjcyLmZmZmZmZi5WRWhGSUZSUFYwNGdUMFlnVEVWRlUwSlZVa2RJLjA/alfa-slab-one.regular.png[/IMG][hr][/center] Leesburgh, Pennsylvania is located in York County along I-83, equidistant between the city of York and the Mason-Dixon Line. It has a population of about 13,000 people and has grown considerably since the eponymous Leesburgh Incident, in which an extraterrestrial object exploded over the town and bathed it in a form of radiation unknown to science. The town has a fairly urban aesthetic, with plaster-facade buildings, copious chain link fences, and lots of concrete. Graffiti covers the overpasses and alleyways. The locations within Leesburgh will be continually updated here, as well as any changes to them. [hider=Locations] [indent][list][*][b]Main Street:[/b] The hub of small business in the city, Main Street is a few blocks in the center of town. It contains many bars, restaurants, and shops, and is a big cultural center for the community. [*][b]Mount Grey State Park:[/b] West of Leesburgh, past the Pile, is a small rugged area affectionately called Mount Grey. Though Mount Grey is only about 800 feet tall at its highest, it has a lot of hiking trails and some beautiful nature despite being so close to an urban area. Some parts of the park are infamously frequented by meth-heads who are too weird even for the Pile. [*][b]Summer Park:[/b] Main Street dead ends into Summer Park, a couple-acre space of green in the otherwise grey and brown city. Grey Park has your usual park amenities: a playground, woods, a gazebo, a community garden, and a skate park. [*][b]The Pile:[/b] Off on the western outskirts of town is an abandoned parking garage known to everyone as the Pile. Once set to be the parking lot for a brand new mall, the Pile was abandoned after the mall project was scrapped, and since has become a hub for the seedier folk in town. Drug dealers, junkies, drag racers, homeless folks, and regular old punks can be found in the Pile. The walls are covered with decades of graffiti, adding a splash of color to the otherwise brutal place. [/list][/indent][/hider] [hider=Businesses/Amenities] [indent][list][*][b]Arby’s:[/b] There’s an Arby’s. The final boss fight will take place in the Arby’s. You can’t stop this. It will happen. [*][b]Big & Tall:[/b] Big & Tall was founded in 1989 in response to growing populations of men over six feet two inches (188 cm) or waist sizes over 40 inches (100 cm). As one can imagine, an observant businessperson noticed the growing demand in Leesburg for odd sized clothing, and has been laughing their way to the bank ever since. [*][b]Black Lotus Tattoos:[/b] Run by Marcey Takahashi, Black Lotus is the most popular tattoo parlor in town. It's on Main Street, a few doors down from Mooncash Coffee. The place has a general punk aesthetic, with walls covered in flash art and graffiti, though the place is kept clean and safe. The store sits on an intersection, and the wall along the side road is covered in graffiti from local artists. [*][b]Happy’s:[/b] At the south end of Main Street is a Happy’s, a cheap restaurant chain found all along the East Coast. Like other instances of the business, Happy’s interior is brightly colored and crushingly claustrophobic. It’s the kind of place you end up when your family says you’re eating out for dinner and nobody can agree on where to go. The food is...allegedly edible. [*][b]Mooncash Coffee:[/b] Located on Main Street, Mooncash is Leesburgh’s premiere overpriced coffee chain. Like some... other coffee chain we may know, it passes itself off as a funky neighborhood joint, but there are in fact hundreds of Mooncashes nationwide, raking in the profits. The hazelnut macchiato is pretty good though. [*][b]Mount Grey Brewing:[/b] Located on Main Street, Mount Grey is a local craft brewery with a taphouse. They’re an average brewery known for hopping on the IPA craze. Their most popular beer, Smoky Mountain High, is an unprecedently bitter duodecuple IPA. It’s said that if you chug a whole pint and close your eyes, you can commune with the hops. [*][b]Rustic Palace Antique Shoppe:[/b] A formerly mom-and-pop establishment (now just pop), the Rustic Palace is an old two-story shoe factory that has been refitted into a store that sells antiques and crafts. In its current state, it is doing rather poorly financially, since the owner has made his pro-power stance known throughout Leesburgh, and most of his old friends and customers have since turned against him. The Rustic Palace still stands however, not yet a victim to an act of arson. [*][b]Saturday Comics:[/b] Located on Main Street, Saturday Comics is the premier location in Leesburgh for comics, manga, and tabletop gaming. It’s a narrow and crowded store, like a comic shop fused with a secondhand bookstore, but in the back has a large room bigger than the entire store that acts as a lounge and tabletop gaming area. There’s armchairs for readers and large tables with DM screens and Warhammer 40K setpieces. There’s also a large bookshelf that contains dozens of DnD 4e models, from dragons to xorns to a few player characters. [*][b]The Manic Mechanic:[/b] A one stop mom and pop owned shop for all your automobile related needs. Known for surprisingly quick and cheap service. Oh, and the owner’s dog wanders the office and waiting room. Beat that, dealerships! [*][b]Taco Horn:[/b] Located in the same strip mall as Yalmart, this particular Taco Horn is exactly the same as every other conceivable Taco Horn. [*][b]Ted & Ted’s:[/b] “We here at Ted & Ted’s believe every human and metahuman should reach for their full potential. And maybe make some money off it in the process.” Ted & Ted’s is owned and run by retired boxer Ted Harvey and his nephew Ted Cotton. The gym caters almost exclusively to CL’s, oftentimes contracting special equipment on demand. There are a few rumors circulating about after hours activities, but nothing substantial has been documented or proven and is likely just because Ted is a retired pro-boxer. [*][b]Tom & Nuss Horizons Fulfillment Center:[/b] A soybean refinery situated within skipping distance of the police station that exports soybeans regionally and internationally. The factory employs more citizens than any other single locale with a tempting benefits package in exchange for a demanding work schedule. It's previously been featured on national newspapers for repeated instances of reinstituting a company scrip around town, though its image has recently been rehabilitated by supplying Mooncash with its premium soy milk. [*][b]Yalmart:[/b] Located in a strip mall north of Summer Park, Yalmart is your go-to location for all your...everything, as long as it’s cheap. It’s...it’s fucking Walmart okay? [/list][/indent][/hider] [hider=Civics] [indent][list] [*][b]Agency of Supernatural Affairs Headquarters:[/b] Adjacent to Leesburgh General is the ASA headquarters, a four-story concrete office building with black windows. The first floor is familiar to many CLs, as they are often brought there for interviews, but most of the rest of the building is off-limits to the public. [*][b]Jack Kirby High School:[/b] The only high school in Leesburgh, Kirby, as it’s called, is your standard high school: brick walls, two stories, chalkboards and fiberboard desks. The student population is about 700 kids, many of whom are CLs. They have a track, a baseball field, a modest football field, and a tennis court. The rest of their sports take a bus to HACC. [*][b]Leesburgh Public Library:[/b] A few blocks east of Kirby is the town’s public library, a squat, one-story brick building with long windows. The library’s nothing special, really- just a meeting place for those without internet and kids from the high school whose parents have to pick them up later. There’s a game night every Tuesday where the library hosts Super Smash Bros Brawl tournaments. [*][b]Leesburgh General Hospital:[/b] Located in the heart of town, Leesburgh General is a modestly-sized hospital. It has an ER, an ICU, a maternity ward, and a few floors for various other patients. Most patients requiring serious medical attention are sent instead to UMPC in York, but Leesburgh General has, inevitably, come to specialize in CLs, from their birth to injuries involving their bizarre biology. [*][b]York County Police Station:[/b] Located north of town along I-83, the police station deals with your everyday crime and law enforcement in the city. It’s a pretty normal building, just one story and brick with a marble veranda on the front that looks out of place. Beside the building is a large fluorescent sign that just reads “POLICE”. [/list][/indent][/hider]