It's the year 3476, the radiation bleeding sun swung over the plasteel plated horizon of Neon Gulch, painting the sky a technicolored blue. In the greasy underbelly of this technology laced corporate funded citygram, two figures emerged from their vintage chrome coffin – a cherry hotdog truck christened "The Weiner Warrior."
Their truck, a monument to pre-apocalyptic culinary delights, rumbled to life with a vintage cough and sputter. The aroma of sizzling franks and caramelized onions, a symphony of forgotten flavors, wafted through the smog-choked air. Neon Gulch, usually a hive of nickel-plated robohustlers and cyborg scavengers, paused to inhale.
By the time the sun dipped below the horizon, Neon Gulch had become a carnival of ketchup-stained faces and greasy grins. The Wiener Warriors, once outcasts, were heroes. They'd reminded a citygram drowning in mandatory adverts that real taste, real food, could still exist in the corporate wasteland.