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[[quoteright:350:[[Webcomic/{{Sinfest}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/illuminati_2.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Well, that didn't take long.]]

A character orders something ([[AcmeProducts that they will likely end up hurting themselves with]]) and places the order in the mailbox/calls it in/whatever you can think of. The ordered goods will be delivered within seconds. At its extreme, the character places their order form in the mail box, closes it, and then opens the mailbox again to pull out what they ordered, without any postal carrier even touching it.

Please do not confuse this with ExpressDelivery or any other childbirth-related trope. May be an AcceptableBreakFromReality in a VideoGame. Contrast ProductDeliveryOrdeal, when the process of bringing the package to the customer is shown to be arduous and challenging, and the story uses that as a plot device.

----
!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Advertising]]
* Ads for Jimmy John's sandwich shops, which specialize in deliveries, frequently depict the sandwich arriving seconds after a customer orders. One humorously has an elderly gentleman at a retirement community ordering a sandwich, and when the delivery guy arrives seconds later he asks [[GrumpyOldMan "what took ya so long?"]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* According to a mangaka-approved doujin from ''Anime/DanceInTheVampireBund'', Lorenzo Pharmaceuticals (The vampire-owned corporation that mass-produces the artificial blood Stigma) has this reputation. At one point a desperate doctor working in a field hospital in the middle of Afghanistan that was cut off from all communication and was desperately running low on blood tromped out an order for Stigma in the dirt outside the hospital. Two crates were air-dropped in less than 48 hours later.
* In ''Manga/DarwinsGame'', when a buyer purchases anything from the in-app store, the physical goods are instantly delivered to their current location. Kaname was shocked the first time he saw it in action.
* ''Anime/EngageKiss'': During a fight with a demon that they need to capture, Shu orders a capture weapon from the city's delivery express. Said express instantly arrives at the building the fight is.
* In an episode/chapter of ''Manga/HayateTheCombatButler'', Nagi orders something from Amazon and it is delivered in 30 minutes. Lampshaded by Hayate and Maria, who wonder when Amazon started offering that service.
* Seen in Episode 3 of ''Anime/OhSuddenlyEgyptianGod''. Anubis orders some pizza on the phone, and then the second he closes the phone, Horus is already at his place with the order.
* A running gag in ''Anime/Persona4TheAnimation'' is Aiya's ability to deliver beef bowls ''anywhere,'' including the middle of a chase scene, to a customer who never gave a location.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* Subverted in ''ComicBook/ScottPilgrim'' Volume 1. Scott orders CD's from amazon.ca so that the girl he likes/is obsessed with/is stalking will deliver them. One scene change later he runs to the door, and no one is there. His roommate reminds him that he put the order in less then three hours ago. In actuality the package arrives the next morning; given Amazon, this is damn near uncanny.
** Played with even more in TheMovie; the delivery arrives straight after Wallace's lampshading, but only thanks to one of the movie's many {{Smash Cut}}s. Scott's ''still'' sitting by the door, though.
* Thanks to matter-manipulation nanotechnology, instant delivery is a common feature of life in Warren Ellis's ''ComicBook/{{Transmetropolitan}}''.
* [[http://i71.photobucket.com/albums/i144/bunnyfriend/roger%20rabbit%20toontown%203/RRTT_three0003.jpg A tie-in comic book]] to ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'' lampshaded this as one of the better things about living in Toontown. In fact, the item Roger ordered arrived [[RuleOfFunny before he placed the order]], prompting him to declare that the modern world is moving a little too fast.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* Acknowledged in ''ComicStrip/BabyBlues''. Darryl and Zoe put an order for an item in the mailbox. After staring at it for a second, Zoe asks "What's taking so long?" As Zoe is a toddler at the time, we can guess that her concept of mail delivery came from cartoons.
* ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'':
** Once Garfield ordered a cup of coffee over the Internet. It arrived instantly.
** In [[https://d1ejxu6vysztl5.cloudfront.net/comics/garfield/2014/2014-09-04.gif this]] strip Jon orders a pizza over the telephone and the delivery guy is right behind him in the next panel.
* Erudite and intellectual Zebra of ''ComicStrip/PearlsBeforeSwine'' occasionally mails letters to the lions who are attacking his herd. He always gets a reply the next day, but it's never good news.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film -- Animation]]
* Played with on ''WesternAnimation/PenguinsOfMadagascar''. The penguins have arrived at Shanghai, but due to Kowalski's miscalculations, think they're in Dublin. When they figure out that the villain is going to strike Shanghai next, they get inside a box and [[HumanMail mail themselves there]]. The mail truck arrives moments later, picks up the package, then goes around the block and deposits the package back in the same spot.
* Cornerstore.com is renowned for their speedy deliveries in the film ''WesternAnimation/{{Storks}}''. [[spoiler:So the protagonists make use of it to get back to the warehouse just as quickly by ordering something off the site, and then issuing a return with the company and [[HumanMail hiding inside of the box]].]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* Roy takes advantage of this during the "cartoon mouse" sequence in ''Film/StayTuned'', ordering a Robo-Dog to defeat the Robo-Cat that's been chasing him and Helen.
* [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in ''Film/ScottPilgrimVsTheWorld''. As mentioned above, Scott's package arrives almost instantaneously because Ramona [[ItMakesSenseInContext used the conveniently located passageway inside Scott's mind to speed up the delivery.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]

* ''Literature/ThePlantThatAteDirtySocks'': Inverted -- book 1 explains that Michael is always saving things and sending away for them, but they take so long to arrive that it's a nice surprise when they ''do'' arrive, because he's usually forgotten about it by that point.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* Happens in the ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}'' episode "Sin Francisco", thanks to magic.
* One MonsterOfTheWeek in ''Series/GekisouSentaiCarranger'' fights by ordering weapons by phone from a catalogue to fight the rangers. The rangers are able to beat them when they realize that they can send back the orders.
* Played with in ''Series/ILoveLucy'' where the day earlier Lucy buys a hat, breaking her bet with Ricky, so she tries to get him to lose his temper so he breaks his end of the bet before the hat is delivered. After he wins a contract negotiation by keeping his cool, he calls off the bet and tells Lucy to take her time and get whatever hat she wants. She pretends to order the same hat she bought earlier on the phone and asks for their "fastest, speediest delivery." She hangs up and cue the door buzzer immediately going off. Ricky opens the door, the delivery man hands the package over to him and leaves.
* ''Series/LazyTown'':
** Robbie Rotten does this OncePerEpisode when thinking up a scheme to get rid of Sportacus or for other reasons. He orders something over the phone, which ''immediately'' shows up. Products he's ordered include three copies of himself and ''a life-size pyramid''.
** The heroes once order a cookbook, which also takes very little time to arrive.
* In an episode of ''Series/MyHero2000'', George orders an animal translator from his home planet so he can understand why Janet's mum's dog is so upset. Janet protests that by the time it arrives, the dog will be gone... at which point the package arrives. George complains about service decay.
* ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000'': "We ordered it from Instant Monkeys Online, and it came instantly, just like the ad said!"
* An episode of ''Series/SesameStreet'' had The Count order by telephone, saying "[[SeriousBusiness I need something to count in a hurry!]]" We immediately hear the delivery truck squeal to a stop outside.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* According to ''Rise of the Ogre'', this happened to Music/{{Gorillaz}}: Murdoc had just put the phone down after calling NME magazine to place an ad for a guitarist when a [=FedEx=] crate containing child prodigy musician Noodle arrived at the door. [[{{Jerkass}} He reportedly left the ad in the magazine anyway just so he could tell everyone who applied to "sling their hook".]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* As an homage to this trope's frequent usage in classic cartoons, ''TabletopGame/{{Toon}}'' allows players to mail-order items and have them delivered by their next turn. However, the items ordered are more likely than not "shoddy goods" that will backfire on their users.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossing'':
** In the series, special orders at Tom Nook's store (and, in [[VideoGame/AnimalCrossing2001 the first game]], fossil identifications) take only one day to show up in your mailbox at no extra charge. That's slower than some of these examples but still several times faster than real-world free shipping.
** In ''[[VideoGame/AnimalCrossingNewLeaf New Leaf]]'' mail is always delivered at certain times of day. Anything you order from the store catalog will arrive at the next delivery time no matter how long that will be. So if you order something at 4:59pm, it will arrive one minute later. But if you order something at 5:01pm, you'll have to wait until next morning to get it.
* ''VideoGame/CounterStrike: Global Offensive'''s battle royale mode has delivery by drone. Generally reaches your exact position within a minute of placing the order, though you might have to deal with enemies shooting the package out of the sky before it can get to you.
* In ''VideoGame/DayOfTheTentacle'', a diamond is sent by "Pronto Post Light-Speed Delivery" and arrives about one second after hanging up the phone. "Now that's service!" Bernard quips. Pony Express riders in the colonial era seem to have a similar response time with picking up a letter from a mailbox.
* ''Videogame/EarthBound1994'' has a pizza delivery guy who will satisfy your HyperactiveMetabolism within three minutes, real-time. Even if you are in a volcanic cavern on the other side of the world, a FloatingContinent that can only be reached by teleportation, or a secret alien base beneath Stonehenge, he will [[OffscreenTeleportation show up anyways]].
* ''Sorcerer'', the second game in the ''VideoGame/{{Enchanter}}'' trilogy, justifies this via TimeTravel and RuleOfFunny, as the company promises delivery of the item as soon as you mail out for it.
* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
** Items in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'' prequel ''VideoGame/CrisisCore'' are bought over Zack's company-issue cellphone. The items appear in your inventory the moment you purchase them, even if you're miles from civilization.
** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII'' does this too, just using save points instead of a cell phone. [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII2 The sequel]] reveals that shops in Cocoon deliver their products via automated delivery drones that receive the order, collect the item, and bring it to the customer. The trope is justified in Cocoonite cities like Palumpolum, slightly less so in abandoned areas like the Vile Peaks, and outright un-BS-able in the far reaches of Pulse. [[spoiler:And no, the fal'Cie masking their orders (as revealed in the menu for the last couple shops) does not justify the delivery times.]]
* In ''VideoGame/HarvestMoon: Animal Parade'' for the Wii your character can order pretty much anything over the phone and have it delivered instantly, but it costs twice as much as if you went to the store and bought it.
* Ditto for ''VideoGame/JustCause2'': Sloth Demon/[[spoiler:Tom Sheldon]] appears instantly when called with whatever gun, vehicle, or upgrade you were about to ask him for. He can also [[WarpZone shuttle you around]] in his helicopter, which apparently flies several times faster than a fighter jet.
* Several examples in ''VideoGame/KingdomOfLoathing'', but one of the oldest is the Discount Telescope Warehouse telescope delivery: "You drop the order form in a mailbox in Seaside Town, and see a bolt of light whoosh across the sky over your head, toward your campsite. When you head back, there's a shiny new telescope there!" Upgraded lenses arrive similarly, but after fully upgrading the telescope, "You fill out the form and drop it in a mailbox in town. No sooner has it hit the bottom of the box than a tiny pixie appears next to you" to give you meat compensation instead.
* InteractiveFiction ''VideoGame/KurusuCity'' has a local store. Since you don't have cash to purchase the item at the store, you have to take the ship and bill option. It takes 43 seconds to be delivered, and as an cruel UnwinnableByDesign, can crush an item you forgot to collect from said mailbox.
* In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'', it is possible to acquire a cow from the Lon Lon Ranch. This cow will soon show up at your house all the way over in Kokiri Forest... your ''tree house.'' Which is accessed by a slender vertical ladder. How they get the cow up there is anybody's guess.
* Played with in ''VideoGame/LittleInferno'', where you have to order [[ItMakesSenseInContext items to burn]] from the Tomorrow Corp. catalog, and they ''do'' take time to arrive...but they still take only seconds or minutes (for the expensive late-game items) to arrive to your house, and if you get impatient, you can spend tokens to make them arrive instantly.
* ''VideoGame/ManiacMansion'' established the Edison house as having some kind of magic mailbox. Weird Ed's package and mailing off a manuscript or demo tape to Three Guys Publishing are essential to several of the story endings.
* ''VideoGame/MarioParty3'': There's an item called Cellular Shopper, which calls a store and lets you buy one item. There's no turn wait, you get it immediately.
* ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'': The Normandy now has a requisition console in the hanger that allows Shepard to order items from vendors on the Citadel. They arrive instantly, though there's a 10% markup due to the difficulty of getting them delivered in the middle of a galaxy-spanning warzone.
* The [[TheMafiya Russian Mafia]] black marketeers in ''VideoGame/{{Mercenaries}}: Playground of Destruction'' might as well start identifying themselves with the tagline "delivered by airlift in 30 seconds or less."
* Need more ammo or a better gun during a firefight in ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots''? Don't worry, Drebin offers instant battlefield delivery. Bizarrely, they hint that they use the Mark II to carry the stuff back and forth, despite the fact that it moves nowhere near that fast...
* [[AvertedTrope Averted]] with the items you order from Tanaka in ''VideoGame/{{Persona 3}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{Persona 4}}'', as well as the items you buy from the shopping channel and Shady Commodities in ''VideoGame/{{Persona 5}}''. They arrive in a few days, which is about the time you'd expect for a mail-order delivery.
* Sophia's Shop in ''VideoGame/Persona5Strikers'', where she somehow manages to source a dark web vendor selling ''gold bars'' within Yongen-Jaya when Ryuji [[IWasJustJoking jokingly orders one]], and soon finds vendors that can more than adequately substitute for the temporarily closed Untouchable and Takemi Medical Clinic, and always pushes to use "Expedited Home Delivery".
* Somewhat averted in ''VideoGame/PokemonChannel'', as anything you order will turn up the next day, but played straight if you order a bus pass.
* ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClank'': The PDA (Personal Delivery Assistant) can be used to instantly order ammo regardless of your current location (at an increased cost). It even works in the vacuum of space on the Gemlik Base, outside the Blarg Tactical Research Station, or outside Drek's fleet.
* In ''VideoGame/RecRoom'', items you purchase in game will immediately materialize in front of you in a flurry of orange cubes.
* ''VideoGame/SheepDogNWolf'' enabled you to post an order for an item in a certain mailbox, only for it to arrive by air mail seconds later. Sometimes next to the mailbox, other times in ridiculously out of the way places.
* ''VideoGame/TheSims2'' features nearly instantaneous home delivery of groceries, not to mention the fact that you can enter purchase or construction modes and instantly buy and place any product in the game's catalog.
* In ''VideoGame/SpaceQuestIIVohaulsRevenge'', the Labion Terror Beast mating call whistle shows up almost immediately after Roger places the form in the mail.
* An upgrade in the campaign mode of ''VideoGame/StarcraftII'' allow your [=SCVs=] to have [[ConstructAdditionalPylons Supply Depots]] instantly beamed down onto the battlefield from the ship, which lets the SCV spend more time [[YouRequireMoreVespeneGas collecting minerals and gas]] or constructing other types of buildings. Justified in this case, as it is a technology reverse engineered from Protoss warping capabilities.
* In ''VideoGame/AnUntitledStory'', any furniture bought from the landlord in [=SkyTown=] will be delivered to your home [[GoWaitOutside as soon as you leave the screen]].
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' imposes a one-hour delay on most in-game mail, including earnings from selling on the Auction House - less for realism than to avoid abuse. However, there is no delay for mail between members of the same guild or characters on the same account, nor items you buy on the Auction House or most mail from NPC's. The mail is also delivered to every usable mailbox in the game at once; wherever you are, it will be in the local mailbox if you look.
* In addition to more conventional shops, ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}}'' allows the party to purchase things via UMN (the Internet, essentially) and all goods arrive instantaneously
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Animation]]
* In episode 3 of ''WebAnimation/TheStrangerhood'', the Mysterious Voice has a delivery truck drop off a new pair of pet fish for Sam as soon as he suggests getting some. Sam lampshades it with a remark of "That was fast", but it's most likely the Voice planned that from the start since he planned for the fish to die too.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Justified in ''WebComic/AlienLovesPredator,'' as Cheng uses [[HyperspaceOrSubspace hyperspace]] to deliver the gang's Chinese takeout instantaneously. A delay of two seconds has him blame traffic.
* Florence in ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' [[http://freefall.purrsia.com/ff600/fv00547.htm posts an ad looking for a contractor]].
* In ''Webcomic/TheGamer'', if you pay for quick delivery on the Abyss Auction website, you get your money's worth as the physical goods are delivered in ''seconds''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Videos]]
* Played with in WebVideo/TheAngryVideoGameNerd's Atari 5200 review, in which he ordered a replacement controller for the system [[spoiler: which turned out didn't fit properly and was useless]]. He's seen placing the order, then a cutaway to a clip from ''VideoGame/{{Paperboy}}'', throwing the parcel, then the Nerd opens his front door and gets hit in the face with it.
* WebVideo/TheCinemaSnob orders a bucket this way.
* ''WebVideo/LoadingReadyRun'': One Crapshot (quick sketch) has something (it's never shown what) being ordered over the internet for delivery NOW (NOW). The moment confirm order is clicked, the person doing it gets a box thrown at him and a delivery person shows up asking him to sign. [[spoiler: NOW isn't even the fastest option, there's also a Causality Violation option to have had it delivered at the end of the day yesterday, and a The Mending option to already have owned it for two weeks.]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NdPFwb3FTk "My new internet penis is here!"]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheAngryBeavers'', Daggett and Norbert's dam has mailing tubes that delivers mail and packages in and out of the dam and all throughout the world, usually within a few seconds of ordering something.
* ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'': Courage usually gets his stuff delivered just a few seconds after ordering it from a guy named Mr. Mouse.
* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheCrumpets'', Cordless orders fast food, in addition to gifts for Ms. [=McBrisk=], which all arrive in few seconds by helicopter.
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' Sam orders pizza (and later some updated computer software) and they both arrive within seconds. It's implied that she gets this kind of service because she comes from a wealthy family, the "little people" just have to wait it out.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' episode "The Route of All Evil," Cubert and Dwight order a pedal-powered spacecraft out of the back of a comic book. The ad says "Allow four to six seconds for delivery." As the boys wait impatiently by the mailbox, Cubert sniffs, "More like seven", right before the package shoots out right at him and knocks him off his feet.
* In ''WesternAnimation/GoofyGymnastics'', WesternAnimation/{{Goofy}} places his order form for home exercise equipment in the post box, and the moment he closes the door, the bottom door of the box opens, with the package containing the equipment coming out.
* Happened in ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZim''. The delivery was intergalactic and still took place in a few seconds.
* Parodied on ''WesternAnimation/{{Jellystone}}'' episode "A Fishsticky Situation" when Brain from ''WesternAnimation/TopCat'' orders a pair of macaroni shoes on her phone and chooses the instant delivery option... which raises the price from $8 to ''$8,000''. This ends up relevant later when Top Cat needs to order more tomato bisque to [[spoiler:cure the townspeople, who have been turned into fish people from eating expired fish sticks]] and getting it delivered instantly costs them all the money they have left.
* ''WesternAnimation/JohnnyBravo'' does this when Johnny's mom orders a mail-order robot nanny, which arrives at her front door the instant she puts the envelope into her mailbox (which had also been ripped out of the ground and brought into the house by Johnny.)
* On ''WesternAnimation/{{Kaeloo}}'', anything the characters order immediately falls out of the sky.
* WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes:
** This happens with any product Wile E. Coyote orders in the ''WesternAnimation/WileECoyoteAndTheRoadRunner'' cartoons. Say what you will about Acme's quality control, their distribution system is second to none!
** Also, in the cartoon where WesternAnimation/BugsBunny squares off against the opera singer ("WesternAnimation/LongHairedHare"), he orders a set of ear-muffs through the mail. They arrive in seconds, [[RuleOfFunny while the letter is still in the mail box.]]
** In "Ducking the Devil", WesternAnimation/DaffyDuck places a mail order for a trombone. It arrives in a few seconds without the letter being retrieved.
** In "WesternAnimation/CountMeOut", Egghead orders a package via toy plane and an old man in a horse drawn mail coach instantly pulls up as soon as the plane goes over the hill. Then the old man rants on how he would of been there ''sooner'' but the bridge was out.
* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'': A variant in "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS5E13DoPrincessesDreamOfMagicSheep Do Princesses Dream of Magic Sheep?]]" where the "delivery" is the Princess of the Moon, but still very close in spirit. When Spike sends the message asking advice from Luna, she's at the door a ''second'' later. Sure, she certainly teleported (you can in fact hear the sound effect before she opens the door), but you have to wonder how fast she ''read'' the message itself.
-->'''Fluttershy:''' Wow, that was fast...
* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'': Any stuff the two protagonists order for their big ideas is delivered the same day, and early enough for them to still have time to carry out their plan.
* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'': In "Jack vs. Aku", Aku places an order for a bounty hunter to go after Jack. He's told they'll arrive in ThirtyMinutesOrItsFree, but to his surprise, the bounty hunter teleports right into his lair seconds after hanging up. Unfortunately for Aku, they're defeated by Jack [[CurbStompBattle just as quickly]].
* Not ''quite'' instant, but in the ''WesternAnimation/ShaunTheSheep: Adventures From Mossy Bottom'' episode "Express Delivery", as soon as Blitzer orders the Farmer's new glasses online, the computer screen shows a graphic of the post van making its way to the farm, like a "track my pizza" app. When the sheep run out to stop it, it turns out to already be within a few miles.
* Averted whenever anyone orders something on ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. The scene will always cut to the delivery "six to eight weeks later."
* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': In "Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy II", [=SpongeBob=] wins a prize from a contest and begins to ask "I wonder when my prize will get here?", and he turns back to find a delivery boy right next to him with his prize in hand (and even a handkerchief when he cries tears of joy).
* ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'': Buster and Babs order a pizza which comes a second later, which makes sense since the delivery boy is [[WesternAnimation/WileECoyoteAndTheRoadRunner The Roadrunner's]] JuniorCounterpart, Little Beeper.
-->'''Buster:''' What took you so fast?
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]
* The US Postal service prototyped a system to use ''[[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill cruise missiles]]'' to [[MundaneUtility deliver packages and letters]]. The system worked well but it was deemed [[AwesomeButImpractical too noisy to enter full scale production]].
* Digital content can be downloaded instantly after purchase from online platforms such as the iTunes Store, Platform/{{Steam}}, the Platform/PlayStation Store, Creator/{{Nintendo}}'s Virtual Console, and the like. The only limit is your Internet speed, and occasionally how badly their servers are being hammered at the time.
* Amazon patented[[note]]Despite headlines, they probably haven't seriously considered doing it[[/note]] a system of drones and flying airship warehouses and drones. An airship is loaded with commonly ordered items and cruises about the city. When a customer orders something available with the service, the crew of the nearest airship load it into a delivery drone, which then flies to the customer.
[[/folder]]
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