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10[[quoteright:325:[[Film/BladeRunner2049 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chance_of_rain.png]]]]
11
12->''"The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel."''
13-->-- [[WeatherReportOpening Opening line]] of ''Literature/{{Neuromancer}}'' [[note]]Keep in mind that this refers to the grey static of older analogue televisions, not the [[TechnologyMarchesOn solid blue or black of digital ones]].[[/note]]
14
15Ever noticed how the weather is always lousy in CyberPunk settings? Whenever it's not pouring rain, the sky is overcast with dark, [[PollutedWasteland pollution-laden clouds]] that barely let any sunlight through.
16
17Inherited from the similarly crappy weather of the FilmNoir genre, dark weather has the benefit of making the [[NeonCity bright lights]] and [[AdvertOverloadedFuture advertisements]] of a futuristic city stand out, as they reflect off rain droplets and puddles. By contrast, the resulting damp and lack of color gives the street level a very downtrodden, dirty look, particularly where TheCityNarrows and the high-tech infrastructure is decayed and rusted. Also like Film Noir, works involving these kinds of weather patterns will nearly always take place at night.
18
19Often overlaps with IndustrialGhetto. Compare CityNoir, GrayRainOfDepression, and PartlyCloudyWithAChanceOfDeath.
20
21----
22!!Examples:
23
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
27* ''Anime/DominionTankPolice'' is set in a future where the weather is so bad even ordinary people carry gas masks with them for fear of pollution.
28* In ''Anime/ErgoProxy'', the world is always cloudy. It's a plot point [[spoiler:because the Proxies were designed to die in the presence of sunlight]].
29* In the ''Franchise/GhostInTheShell'' franchise, ''Anime/GhostInTheShell1995'' and ''Innocence'' qualify abundantly, though in keeping with the show's status as LighterAndSofter, the weather is nicer in ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex''. There are still more than a few episodes with rain, such as the fourth episode of the first season, where it's actually a minor plot point (a murder is covered up as a traffic accident caused by a rainstorm).
30* Though not strictly cyberpunk, ''Anime/{{K}}: Missing Kings'' evokes the genre by using this look in the opening sequence to introduce the tech-tinged new antagonists, JUNGLE.
31* In ''Anime/{{Kiba}}'', there's [[AnachronismStew one place populated entirely by cyborgs]] where it's always raining.
32* The Hidden Rain Village in ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' gives off this vibe: Though its technology isn't that much greater than the surrounding areas, it is still a very densely populated urban region with tall industrial-looking buildings where, true to its name, it's always raining.
33* There's always some clouds or weird shadows in ''Anime/SerialExperimentsLain''.
34* ''Manga/SilentMobius'', which was heavily influenced by ''Film/BladeRunner'', is set in a Tokyo with near constant rain.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Comic Books]]
38* In ''ComicBook/{{Elephantmen}}'', it rains very frequently in 2250's Los Angeles. British-born creator Richard Starkings says this is because "all Englishmen in L.A. miss the rain -- or at least ''I'' do."
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Film -- Animation]]
42* This trope is what drives the plot of ''Animation/SkyBlue''.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
46* The climate on the planet in ''Film/{{Aliens}}'' is inhospitable. It's [[AlwaysNight always dark]] and rainy.
47* [[ZigZaggingTrope Zig-zagged]] in ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'': the film, while adapting [[Manga/BattleAngelAlita a classic cyberpunk story]] and largely keeping the manga's overall dark tone, has a distinctive LighterAndSofter vibe, and most of it happens under a bright sunlight. However, whenever the story turns to the dark, [[EmpathicEnvironment a night descends, and the rain starts]] in earnest.
48* One doesn't see any sunshine in ''Film/Avalon2001'', but that might be a side-effect of making everything DeliberatelyMonochrome.
49* The Earth in ''Film/{{Avatar}}'' is seen to look like this in new scenes added at the beginning of the Collector's Edition Extended Cut.
50* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''Film/BackToTheFuturePartII''. The [=DeLorean=] lands in a back alley, gearing up for a dark, cyberpunk setting... and then the skies clear.
51* ''Film/BladeRunner'' is probably responsible for [[TropeMakers starting the trend]] in films. The endless rain was a reference to FilmNoir. It also helped disguise the fact that he was just shooting on the backlot -- all those scenes set at night with lots of rain and smoke are a great disguise. In this [[http://archive.wired.com/entertainment/hollywood/magazine/15-10/ff_bladerunner?currentPage=all 2005 interview with Wired Magazine]], Creator/RidleyScott stated that the rain in part was present to hide the wires on the Spinners. Quote: "Because you can't make a spinner fly without a crank. That's why it was raining in the shot, because the rain would help to hide the cables." This page's image even comes from the sequel ''Film/BladeRunner2049'', which is also very rainy even if with more dry sequences (especially those not in Los Angeles).
52* [[ShapedLikeItself It's always dark in]] ''Film/DarkCity'', which is {{justified|Trope}} by [[spoiler:the eponymous city being controlled by aliens who can't stand strong light]].
53* The protagonist of the Italian film ''Film/HandsOfSteel'' (also known as ''Vendetta dal futuro'', ''Fists of Steel'', ''Paco the Death Machine'', in Quebec as ''L'enfonceur'') is a cyborg sent to kill a scientist who is trying to stop acid rains. Not far from the beginning, his car gets [[HollywoodAcid burned]] by such rain.
54* ''Film/{{Immortal}}'' takes place in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity, where the skies are perpetually and dismally overcast, except in Central Park, which mysteriously has the weather conditions of Antarctica.
55* In ''Franchise/TheMatrix'', the weather is initially always nice inside the matrix, but outside the Matrix, the sun is permanently blocked by a planet-covering cloud of nanites. Once [[spoiler:Smith takes over]], the trope applies directly to the world inside the Matrix.
56* ''Film/MinorityReport'' features some sunny vistas, but there's also quite a few overcast skies, as well as precog-predicted rain.
57* ''Film/SplitSecond1992'' features this with ([[TheNineties then-]]) future London, and so bad that a good chunk of it has long since flooded. You never even see the sun up until the final credits.
58* In ''Film/TronLegacy'', {{Cyberspace}} is clouded over pretty much all the time, although it never actually rains. However, there is the one scene when [[spoiler:Gem meets Sam in the street]] and she is wearing a raincoat and carrying an umbrella.
59* ''Film/TroubleInMind'' is a noirish tale set in an indeterminate retro-future filmed in Seattle, appropriately named "Rain City".
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Literature]]
63* In George Johansson's novel ''Datorernas död'' (''Death of the Computers''), pollution and climate change has rendered the skies almost permanently overcast.
64* ''Literature/EmpireFromTheAshes'': Although it isn't cyberpunk (despite an army of cyborgs and more people being cyborgized daily), ''Armageddon Inheritance'' plays this straight. Earth is being sieged by AbsoluteXenophobe aliens, who [[ColonyDrop bombard it with asteroids]], the only starship went searching for help and disappeared, missiles and energy are running low... Asteroids that break through defenses usually hit oceans, filling air with water and salt and increasing albedo. Most scenes set on Earth during the siege have icy rain as a backdrop. The happy ending {{invert|edTrope}}s this -- the rains have washed all pollution from the air and the sky is cleaner than it's been for centuries.
65* ''Literature/HaltingState'': {{Justified|Trope}}, of course, as the story takes place in [[UsefulNotes/BritishWeather Scotland]].
66* In Creator/BruceSterling's ''Heavy Weather'' (1994), [[GlobalWarming climate change]] has increased the violence and unpredictability of global weather patterns to such an extent that "Tornado Alley" in the Great Plains has been rendered nearly uninhabitable.
67* ''Literature/TheLatheOfHeaven'' is set in Portland, Oregon, whose normally cool, rainy Northwestern climate has become ''warm'' and rainy, thanks to GlobalWarming. In a 1971 book, for the record; we've seen this coming for a ''long'' time.
68* ''Literature/{{Neuromancer}}'': The original line was meant to invoke the gray static seen when an analog channel goes off air.
69* {{Parodied|Trope}} in ''Literature/{{Neverwhere}}'' by using the same phrase from ''Literature/{{Neuromancer}}'' to describe a ''clear'' sky. Because TechnologyMarchesOn, dead TV channels are now a blank blue.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
73* ''Series/AlteredCarbon'': In the ActionPrologue, Kovacs is apparently in an apartment overlooking a beach at sunset. Then he turns off the ArtificialOutdoorsDisplay to reveal a dark and stormy cityscape with [[AlienSky twin moons]], shortly before a [[StateSec well-armed police unit]] does an explosive entry. When he's resleeved on Earth, the grimy megacities that the lower classes live in are usually seen with overcast weather or pouring rain, to contrast them with the wealthy homes of the Meths who live in StarScraper homes [[LayeredMetropolis above the cloud level]].
74* ''Series/{{Andor}}'' sets up the DarkerAndEdgier cyberpunk look -- in comparison to the usual ''Franchise/StarWars'' universe -- by introducing the main character walking across a bridge in the rain into a CompanyTown. The rain actually proves useful, removing potential witnesses from the streets in a normally busy RedLightDistrict when Cassian ends up killing a couple of corporate security officers.
75* In the miniseries ''Series/ColdLazarus'', it's thick smog, closer to brown smoke. People wonder aloud what it must have been like when the air was clear enough to go for walks outside.
76* Scenes in ''Series/DarkAngel'', when they do take place during the day, are always cloudy and overcast. Though this could just be because the show takes place in UsefulNotes/{{Seattle}}.
77* ''Series/TotalRecall2070'': It's always dark, gloomy, and often raining in the cyberpunkish New York City of 2070.
78[[/folder]]
79
80[[folder:Music]]
81* Music/MindInABox's albums -- [[SequelSong set within a cyberpunk continuity]] -- all take place at night, when Black is engaging in operations for [[BigBrotherIsWatching the Agency]]. The cover art for ''Memories'' depicts Black standing before a pitch-black city, and the final song in the album, "5ynchr0ni7e" begins with White musing on the city.
82-->''The night is black like never before. From the roof of the Agency, the entire sprawling city looks like a dark maelstrom that constantly changes form...''
83[[/folder]]
84
85[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
86* In ''TabletopGame/{{Cyberpunk}} 2020'', the weather often includes acid rain or worse.
87* Storyteller handbooks for the ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'' warn against relying too much on this. It becomes absurd, and eventually it'll flood [[TheMorlocks the Nosferatu]] out of the sewers.
88* The original default campaign setting for ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' was Seattle. Not only was it cloudier and rainier than most of the U.S., but the weather often included acid rain.
89* On the Planet/City of Mort in ''TabletopGame/SLAIndustries'', it rains for approximately 364 days per year. Which is perhaps fortunate, given that even Mister Slayer himself doesn't want to see what happens to the when it stops raining and all of the serial killers, hired mercenaries, gun-wielding gangsters, drug-fueled war veterans, crazed mutants and even his own Operatives get hot and bothered.
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Video Games]]
93* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''VideoGame/AnnoMutationem''. Noctis City is very much a vibrant Cyberpunk metropolis and can look quite gloomy under the cover of night and rain both, but the city is just as often bright, colorful, and sunny thanks to liberal use of "artificial sunlight" deployed by its government.
94* The first arc of ''VideoGame/BinaryDomain'' takes place at night, during heavy rain.
95* The 1997 ''VideoGame/BladeRunner'' video game, being set in the same city and the same time as [[Film/BladeRunner the film]], is a clear-cut example.
96* ''VideoGame/{{Cloudpunk}}'': Nivalis is constantly rainy and overcast, with thick thunderclouds hanging over the city (or at least the parts of it that aren't built underground). Although the game takes place over a single night, making it initially seem like it's just lousy weather on that particular night, it's stated several places that the permanent cloud cover is part of the city as no-one living below the city's spires have ever seen the sun or the sky.
97* [[ZigZaggingTrope Zig-zagged]] in ''VideoGame/Cyberpunk2077''. Rain is a possible weather effect randomly occurring during open world exploration, but it is rather rare. On the other hand, certain main story missions seem hard-wired to make it rain outside once the player reaches certain points purely for the dramatic effect.
98* ''Franchise/DeusExUniverse''
99** It is AlwaysNight or sunset in ''VideoGame/DeusEx''. This is a game mechanics thing -- ''Deus Ex's'' sneaking system requires shadows. It fits perfectly into the game's theme.
100** In ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'', it's ''almost'' always night, overcast or raining. There's plenty of light in Jensen's apartment, though, so it can stream through the windows just like in ''Film/BladeRunner''. In Hengsha, it's actually a perfectly sunny day, but the [[UrbanSegregation Upper City]] high above and the tall buildings block most of the light. The weather in Detroit isn't rainy, but there is the occasional [[AStormIsComing thunder and lightning]].
101* This is a feature of the Junkyard in ''VideoGame/DigitalDevilSaga''. However, unlike most examples, it's actually part of the plot.
102* ''VideoGame/DreamfallChapters'': Zoë complains that it always rains in Europolis, to the point that Zoë jokingly explains to the locals what the Sun is.
103* ''VideoGame/DreamWeb'': Permanent drizzle with occasional showers and lightnings. The protagonist [[StoicWoobie doesn't seem to mind]]. In-game weather report:
104-->'''''General'''\
105As the rainy season continues there will be increased humidity and constant rainfall, although mostly restricted to a light drizzle. Constant cloud cover is expected and temperatures will reach a moderate 20 degrees.\
106'''Pollution'''\
107Due to the rain and cloud cover there will be a serious increase of trapped pollution in the air and it is recommended that masks are worn at all times for those in pollution risk category A. The risk should clear in 2 or 3 weeks.\
108'''Today's Outlook'''\
109Generally poor, uncomfortable humidity, low levels of sunlight and poor visibility.''
110* Played with in ''VideoGame/{{Dystopia}}''. No official maps take place on sunny days. They're all either at night or on overcast days, but this is used uniquely in the tutorial. As you're exploring the [[ElaborateUndergroundBase abandoned underground complex]], your supervisor notes that the artificial day/night cycle is stuck at sunset permanently.
111* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'': It doesn't rain in Midgar because of the plate over the lower city (or cities), but it is dark, gloomy, and polluted, to the point where even the ground and sky turn black around the city on the world map.
112* In ''VideoGame/GeminiRue'', it's always raining on the planet Barracus. This might have something to do with atmospheric conditioning to keep the air breathable for humans.
113* In ''VideoGame/Hitman3'', Chongqing gives off this vibe, as it sets the city at night with a pretty heavy and steady bout of rain, the city streets being awash in neon lights, and the skies are being patrolled by drones, illegal ones at that. The plot at this point is for 47 to enter the ICA Facility below the city [[spoiler:to leak all the ICA's database of targets and contracts, dissolving the organisation]], where the two joint overseers; Imogen Royce and Hush, are leading separate research programs into cutting-edge -- and questionable ''at best'' -- technologies centered around predicting and affecting human behavior, Hush going so far as to use homeless people as his test subjects.
114* The Abandoned Pool in ''VideoGame/LethalLeague Blaze'' becomes this trope once the match has gone on long enough for a OneHitKill to be possible, as an abrupt thunderstorm rolls into the area and [[BattleInTheRain pours rain down on the combatants]].
115* ''VideoGame/MarioKart7'' has a cyberpunk track, [[NewNeoCity "Neo Bowser City"]], where it's always raining.
116* ''VideoGame/MasterDetectiveArchivesRainCode'': The city of Kanai Ward is entirely owned and ruled by a MegaCorp, policed by what are essentially heavily militarized ([[DirtyCop and heavily corrupt]]) corporate security, and is packed with so much neon lighting that even the ''plants'' have it. It's been raining nonstop there for ''three years'' by the time the player character shows up. Some people even walk around with futuristic drone-umbrellas hovering above their heads to keep them dry, though most people opt for much more affordable traditional umbrellas or raincoats. [[spoiler:It turns out the rain is not just a stylistic choice, as the rain clouds are the only thing stopping the homunculi population from going berserk.]]
117* The ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'' series ''loves'' its acid rain, featuring the stuff on two different incarnations of Zebes as well as the SpacePirates' home planet (where it'll kill you in seconds unless you've obtained a hazard shield). {{Subverted|Trope}} with the cyberpunk-inspired Sanctuary Fortress in ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime2Echoes'': the "rain" is actually ''lines of energy'' that ''flow upwards''.
118* New Lumos in ''VideoGame/{{Miitopia}}'' is a cyberpunk, neon-lit city which is perpetually watered by heavy rain.
119* {{Averted|Trope}} in ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdge''. The weather is sunny throughout most of the game except for two nighttime levels.
120* The beginning mission of ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdgeCatalyst'' takes place at night during a rainstorm. The City having a distinct cyberpunk appearance with neon signage all over the place really sets the atmosphere.
121* ''VideoGame/NoUmbrellasAllowed'': Ajik City is a dystopian cyberpunk city where people live in fear of Fixerain, an artificial rain co-produced by CARI and AVAC that's laced with an emotion-suppressing drug. Umbrellas are banned in the city, forcing everyone walk in the rain, whether it's normal rain or Fixerain, and several of your customers complain about it.
122* ''VideoGame/{{Observer}}'' is at night and is always raining throughout the game. There are also a lot of pigeons, making a reference to Blade Runner.
123* One of the urban missions of the original ''VideoGame/PerfectDark'' game (which is set TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture) is on the streets of Chicago; as the whole level is essentially an homage to ''Film/BladeRunner'', it comes complete with heavy, constant rain.
124* {{Parodied|Trope}} in ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClankUpYourArsenal''; a button on a set in Holostar Studios triggers rain on a cyberpunk city set. Press it again and it starts snowing.
125* ''VideoGame/SatelliteReign'' uses this along with many other {{Cyberpunk}} tropes.
126* ''VideoGame/ShadowsOfDoubt'' is set in a [[OneNationUnderCopyright corpo-nation]] cyberpunk ''noir'' dystopia where the [[FloodedFutureWorld world has been largely ruined by apocalyptic flooding]], and as such the three forms of available weather are gloomy overcast, torrential rain, and forlorn snow. Notably, you are never able to see the sun, nor is there anything which constitutes 'bright daylight' in the game's setting.
127* {{Downplayed|Trope}} in ''VideoGame/{{Stray|2022}}''. The city is underground and sealed against weather, but there are old, leaking pipes everywhere that cause water to leak down throughout the city in an accidental simulation of rain.
128* {{Defied|Trope}} in ''VideoGame/{{Transistor}}''; the public [[WeatherControlMachine is able to control the weather via popular vote]], but when Red checks a terminal that contains a weather ballot, rain is specifically left off of it. (The Transistor laments that they can't make it rain to cover their tracks.) [[spoiler:Near the end of the game, Red gets admin privileges for the same terminal, and is able to make it snow instead.]]
129* There's a peripheral reference to this trope in a level of the original ''VideoGame/UnrealTournament''. Outside the windows of the fight compound there is constant rain, and the map description mentions the suicide-inducingly dreary weather as the reason this scientific outpost was converted into a deathmatch arena.
130* The Hong Kong campaign of ''VideoGame/ShadowrunReturns'' takes place just before a severe typhoon is set to hit the city, with the result that your team's home base of Heoi and a large percentage of the game's missions take place with a background of heavy rain.
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Visual Novels]]
134* In ''VisualNovel/BionicHeart'', it is always dark, cloudy or rainy. The horrible weather is explained by GlobalWarming destroying Earth's climate and turning it into a SingleBiomePlanet.
135* In ''VisualNovel/{{Planetarian}}'', the acid rain that has been pouring endlessly for the last thirty years [[spoiler:is a result of the nuclear fallout brought about by the great war that almost wiped out all of humanity]].
136* It's always night in ''VisualNovel/{{Snatcher}}'' -- which is a big homage-off of ''Film/BladeRunner''. Granted, it's because the titular Snatchers' fake skin suffers horribly in direct sunlight.
137* ''VisualNovel/TokyoDark'''s title does not refer to the darkness caused by cloud cover but given how frequent rainy weather is in the game, it might as well. Partly {{enforced|Trope}} by story necessity; rain means there are few people walking the streets, so Detective Ito's job is considerably harder.
138* Due to the ongoing ice age in ''VisualNovel/TokyoNecro'', rather than rain it is snow with the sky being perpetually overcast. Acidic snow at that. And it is mentioned that the city only gets about 2 to 3 days of clear weather each year.
139[[/folder]]
140
141[[folder:Webcomics]]
142* In ''Webcomic/AquaRegia'', rain is shown several times, mostly for RuleOfDrama.
143* In ''Webcomic/AMiracleOfScience'', Venus is depicted this way. WordOfGod say this was a ShoutOut to Creator/RayBradbury and others who depicted Venus in this manner until [[ScienceMarchesOn new information came to light]], although it does fit rather well with Venus being portrayed as TheCityNarrows[=/=]ViceCity of the solar system.
144* ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'': The high-tech dystopian AlternateUniverse of Paradise City is overcast with rain 29 days out of 30. Riff getting a clear view of the sky becomes a plot point, [[spoiler:allowing him to see the giant Dimensional Rift Projector on top of the capital building and leading him to conclude that his own counterpart rules the city. It also turns out later that overuse of Rift Projectors screwed up that world's weather]].
145[[/folder]]
146
147[[folder:Web Original]]
148* At first, episode 1 of ''WebVideo/DynamoDream'' appears to be playing this trope straight, beginning in rainy conditions -- but averts it when an overheard weather forecast declares that the skies are going to clear; by the time the Waterworks Market is open the sun is shining.
149* ''Website/{{Fenspace}}'': The inhabitants of [[http://www.fenspace.net/index.php5?title=Genaros Genaros]], a cyberpunk-themed space station, went through the trouble of building it with tinted windows that let in only 25% of incoming light, installing sprinklers in its central axis and using holograms to make its "sky" look like [[Literature/{{Neuromancer}} a television tuned to a dead channel]] specifically to invoke this trope.
150-->'''S. Malaclypse Fnord, author of ''[[FictionalDocument The Rough Guide to Fenspace]]'':''' If I were to envision a cyberpunk theme park, I couldn't do any better than Genaros. It's dark, dingy, damp, bright, shiny, full of promise and threat. What I don't understand -- what I may never understand -- is how people can stand to live there all the time.
151[[/folder]]
152
153[[folder:Western Animation]]
154* The rain shows up dramatically for the final battle in ''WesternAnimation/PoetAndersonTheDreamWalker'', though it's hinted at early on with cloudy weather and drops on car doors.
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:Real Life]]
158* UsefulNotes/{{Seattle}}, home to many tech companies (prominently giants Amazon, Nintendo of America, and Microsoft, but also many smaller companies), is known for its gray weather.
159** Slightly meta example: the developers for ''VideoGame/ShadowrunReturns'', a cyberpunk computer game based on a cyberpunk tabletop game that are both set in Seattle (renowned for its rainy weather), are situated just outside of Seattle.
160** This stands true for western Oregon and Northern California as well, hence the names "Silicon Forest" and "Silicon Valley," respectively. Pretty much anywhere on the west facing side of the Cascade mountains can be put under this trope with little trouble.
161* UsefulNotes/{{Shanghai}}, the MegaCity ''par excellence'' of China ([[http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ad/Shanghaiviewpic1.jpg/800px-Shanghaiviewpic1.jpg see here]]), gets almost twice as much rain yearly as London does, despite England having a reputation for dismal weather.
162* Some U.K. cities, with their highest concentration of surveillance/security cameras in the world, can be thought of having some cyberpunk elements -- and [[UsefulNotes/BritishWeather the U.K. has a reputation for overcast, wet weather]]. Particularly "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_London_Tech_City Silicon Roundabout]]" (where many start-up tech companies, non-profit organizations and U.K. branches of multinational businesses are based) in UsefulNotes/{{London}}.
163* UsefulNotes/HongKong, often described as a city straight out of a cyberpunk novel (complete with plenty of [[NeonCity neon lights]], one of the busiest districts in the world, winding alleys side by side with plenty of skyscrapers to the point of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_with_the_most_skyscrapers topping the list of cities with the most skyscrapers]], and a thriving night life). It used to (and still occasionally does) have air quality issues that result in copious amounts of smog. In addition, it has a monsoon season and is hit by typhoons every single year.
164* Of course, in any discussion of this trope, you can't forget [[JapanTakesOverTheWorld the Cyberpunk Japanese Neo-Empire]], the financial, cultural, and political heart of any classic cyberpunk world -- and a nation that's even rainier than the UK. UsefulNotes/{{Tokyo}} averages 60 inches of rain per year (for comparison's sake, America's wettest city, Mobile, Alabama, averages 66.3 inches annually), and many cities receive frequent [[http://en.rocketnews24.com/2012/09/02/guerrilla-rainstorm-caught-on-camera-from-tokyo-skytree/ "guerrilla rainstorms"]] due to both the climate and the urban heat island effect.
165* Though not as noticeable or famous as the other East Asian cities in the list, UsefulNotes/{{Seoul}} could be considered as one, thanks to its reputation as the tech-savvy capital of UsefulNotes/SouthKorea, heavy neon lights, and a monsoon season, which results in a [[http://65.media.tumblr.com/92d9cef7a8c3bf91aa137900fb549b8a/tumblr_o6k1faCmKt1ql3r9do1_540.jpg pretty amazing scenery]].
166* UsefulNotes/{{Busan}}, which has even more skyscrapers than Seoul, also qualifies. The port city is geographically similar to Hong Kong, has neon lights, and most importantly, it also has a monsoon season. [[http://i.imgur.com/fq2KYze.jpg The results speak for themselves]].
167* The Nordic Countries. Extremely tech-savvy countries, which are located at the occlusion zone of the Northern Atlantic low pressures. The presence of the Scandian mountains and the ensuing Föhn wind certainly doesn't make the climate drier or sunnier.
168* China used [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_seeding#China cloud seeding]] to prevent rain falling on the 2008 Olympics, by precipitating it over the rest of Beijing. They've also used it to clear smog.
169[[/folder]]

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