Summer Holiday
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This content has been retired and is no longer available in game. |
This is the page for the adventure at the The Road to the White Citadel; if you are looking for the in-game holiday of a similar name, you can find it at Generic Summer Holiday.
Without hang glider
You stumble into a clearing, and there, not more than a hundred yards away, is the fabled White Citadel, bathed in a shaft of pure sunlight.
Unfortunately, it's a hundred yards straight down, at the bottom of the rocky cliff on top of which you're standing.
Grumbling, you head back into the woods, hoping to find another route to your goal.
With hang glider
You stumble into a clearing, and there, not more than a hundred yards away, is the fabled White Citadel, bathed in a shaft of pure sunlight.
Unfortunately, it's a hundred yards straight down, at the bottom of the rocky cliff on top of which you're standing.
You carefully unpack the hang glider you got from the eXtreme Sports Orcs, and take a deep breath followed by a running leap. The countryside stretches out majestically beneath you... hey, you can see your campsite from here! Then you crash into a tree.
You tumble painfully through the branches, and pick yourself up from the ground, moaning and cursing. But then you look up, and there it is, bathed in glory: the White Citadel, your goal. You mark its location on your map for future reference. I guess it's true: in the end, the universe tends to unfold as it should.
Occurred on The Road to the White Citadel (Retired).
Notes
- Grants access to The White Citadel.
- Before you encounter this adventure, you cannot acquire the hang glider.
References
- This adventure is a reference to the movie Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle. Towards the end of the movie, the duo makes use of a hang glider that they had stolen from a group of punks earlier.
- The line "in the end, the universe tends to unfold as it should." is a quote from the movie. Harold manages to get himself arrested for jaywalking, and his cellmate makes this comment, and it later inspires Harold. The line is in itself a reference of the prose poem "Desiderata" by Max Ehrmann, which states "And whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should."
- The name of this adventure may be a reference to the final episode of The Young Ones, titled "Summer Holiday", which involves driving off a cliff.