As days went by, Great Tang Group's T cars started to increasingly become a part of people's lives.
Congestion began to appear in the streets and alleys, and something called a traffic signal light started to show up on the streets of Brunas.
The police also began directing traffic, which became a new part of their job. The bustling city was filled with a vibrant, vivacious energy.
It was as if Brunas was America's New York of the 1950s, developing rapidly, with people full of confidence, bravely trying various new things, and harboring hope for their own lives.
Compared to here, every other place in the world seemed backward, dark, and ignorant, even hopeless.
This place was the lighthouse to the world, illuminating the future direction of global development—many politicians from neighboring kingdoms would come to visit Brunas to learn how to develop cities.