Mai Jun City

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Mai Jun City
Nation: Kzuu Mai
Function: Capital of Kzuu Mai
Population: About 16 million
Leader: Mayor Jaiin Galura

Mai Jun City is the capital of Kzuu Mai, and is also the largest city. Its name comes from the river it is built around, on, over and under, the River Jun, and the largest square in the city, Mai Square (Mai Square also gave its name to the entire country).

Places of Interest

  • Mai Square: The place where the rebels gathered before the Kzuu Maian Revolution - and the resting place of Kalaya Sun - is a vast expanse of paving slabs, occasionally dotted with fountains and interrupted right in the middle with the huge Statue of Democracy; a bronze warrior with shield and spear made up of thousands of tiny people. The ruins of the Imperial Palace have never been cleaned up, and are sill visible from the square.
  • Head Offices of Kzuu Mai: The Head Offices of Kzuu Mai were the centre of Government in Kzuu Mai for the seventeen years it was ruled by Lii Dan Kzuu. The building, with its brooding tinted window covered walls and large enclosed park around it, was once the most secretive place in the country, but now the Offices’ doors are flung open for the tourists to see. The grounds feature a small lake, and a wild animal park.
  • 89th Street: The longest street in Mai Jun City. The south end of it is dominated by the President's House, simply known as 1 89th Street, and the Senate House stands at the opposite end. Between them are some of the other famous sights of Mai Jun City; the headquarters of Kzuu Mai's largest company, YourRanium Uranium Mining, is the tallest building in the country, standing at 1267 feet.
  • The Nukes4U Stadium: The largest stadium in Kzuu Mai, where the final rounds of the Kzuu Maian Football League Cup are played to a crowd of thousands. There are also regular concerts from some of the most famous performers in Kzuu Mai, and, indeed, the world. It has the capacity to hold 75,000 spectators, and is invariably filled for the Kzuu Maian Football League Cup Final, where some of the greatest (and, occasionally, most controversial) victories in the country have taken place.