Steadfast Loyalty
    • Home
    • Opportunities
    • Home Wellness
    • Government Gone Wild
    • National Security
    • Social Issues
    • Veterans/Military
    Steadfast Loyalty
    Home»News For You»Saudi Arabia Reveals Plan For 100-Mile Long Mega City That Horrifies The Internet
    News For You

    Saudi Arabia Reveals Plan For 100-Mile Long Mega City That Horrifies The Internet

    By NickT3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    INTRODUCTION Depictions in a planning document show The Line as a massive micro that would be located at the Gulf of Aqaba and part of it extends into the sea
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

    This past Wednesday, many users across social media compared Saudi Arabia’s recently unveiled advertisement for an absolutely massive megacity project that it has proposed to outright dystopian horror.

    The new project, which has been titled “The Line,” is a new smart megacity project being pushed out in the planned city of Neom, which is located in the far northwestern part of the country. This worryingly ambitious project will end up being about 200 meters, or roughly 650 feet wide and just about 500 meters, or 1,600 feet tall, but it slated to extend out over 170 kilometers, or roughly 106 miles long. The website for this new project stated that once the town is done, the city will house just over nine million people over a total footprint of roughly 34 square kilometers.

    “For too long, humanity has existed within dysfunctional and polluted cities that ignore nature,” exclaimed a promo video for the new project. “Now, a revolution in civilization is taking place. Imagine a traditional city, and consolidating its footprint, designing to protect and enhance nature.”

    The video also claims that The Line is being created to “provide a healthier, more sustainable quality of life.”

    The website seems to promote the highly futuristic megacity as running entirely on renewable energy and preserving 95% of the surrounding land for nature. The city will be constructed as a series of independent nodes connected by a high-speed rail system that can move the entire length of the city in roughly 20 minutes. The city is broken down into three layers: two of which will be underground for infrastructure and transportation, and the final one on the surface which will be only available to pedestrians. There will not absolutely no roads or cars, and the website issues the claim that all people who live there will be able to take care of their daily necessities within a roughly 5-minute walk of their neighborhoods.

    The web page also highlighted the city’s micro-climate, which will be created by “natural ventilation,” creating the “ideal climate all-year-round.” The promotional video went on to explain that the megacity will be surrounded by a structure of mirrored glass facade, and will have “equitable views” and an “immediate access to nature.”

    It has also been announced that the city will be run by AI technology. The released video stated that most services will be entirely autonomous and that artificial intelligence, working alongside predictive models and data analysis, will allow improvements to daily life to come forth.

    All of this ended up sparking a series of intense reactions across social media, with almost all of them comparing the city to works of dystopian horror fiction.

    “I never seen something more dystopian,” exclaimed user @adara_salim.

    “Saudi Arabia figured out a way to cram all the city-dwelling libs into a giant wall that they never have to leave and convinced them it’s really cool and progressive,” stated Michael Knowles. “If we can build it on the southern border, Mohammad bin Salman deserves a Nobel Prize.”

    “This remake of Blade Runner is a little disturbing,” explained John Dickerson, an anchor for CBS News.

    “How is this not a dystopian video game trailer?” tweeted out one games journalist, Ryan Brown.

    “So…..Snowpiercer….But it doesn’t move…But guaranteed to have the same class stratification,” predicted journalism professor and MSNBC contributor Jason Johnson.

    As reported by Bloomberg, the groundwork for the city started back in October of 2021, and the first residents are slated to move into their new homes as soon as 2024.

     

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email

    Related Posts

    Navigating the Realm of Online Dating Asian Women

    March 3, 2026

    Border Czar Declines to Back Noem Amid Ongoing Policy Rift

    February 16, 2026

    RFK Jr. Reveals Graphic Detail of Past Drug Use During Germs Debate

    February 13, 2026
    Top Posts

    Navigating the Realm of Online Dating Asian Women

    March 3, 2026

    Clinton Says Trump Gave No Hint of Epstein Ties

    February 27, 2026

    Biden Makes Rare Campaign Stop After Cancer Diagnosis

    February 27, 2026

    Tlaib Sparks Backlash During SOTU Protest

    February 27, 2026
    Our Picks

    Tlaib Sparks Backlash During SOTU Protest

    February 27, 2026

    Mangione Avoids Federal Death Penalty

    February 27, 2026

    Fresh U.S.-Iran Talks Begin in Geneva

    February 27, 2026
    Most Popular

    Trump Frustrated With Iran Talks, Keeps Strike Option Open

    February 27, 2026

    Clinton Slams Probe Before Epstein Testimony

    February 27, 2026

    Clinton Says He Didn’t Know Woman in Hot Tub Photo

    February 27, 2026
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    • Corrections Policy
    Steadfast Loyalty © 2026. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.