Transcontinental Speedrun
The transcontinental speedrun is a speedrun that requires the runner to circumnavigate the world using rail or boat, returning to their original location. Runs that take more than 80 days are considered invalid.
Rules
The run begins upon setting foot on a vehicle while within any city
The run ends upon setting foot in the city you started in after having circumnavigated the world once.
The only methods of transportation permissible are by rail (including subway and tram services), and ferry/ocean liner/cruise services.
There are several optional game mechanics:
- Penny (start from $0.01)
- Penny but difficult (featuring game mechanics from Ryan Trahan's series)
- Jet Lag (featuring game mechanics from Jet Lag: The Game)
History
1522-09-06: Juan Sebastián Elcano and crew, originally led by Ferdinand Magellan, arrive in Sanlúcar de Barrameda, Spain, and become the first people ever to circumnavigate the world.
1872-12-21: Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout arrive in London, England and set a world record time of 80d. This would therefore make all previous runs invalid.
1890-01-25: Nellie Bly sets a world record time of 72d.
1890-05-24: George Francis Train arrives in Tacoma, Washington and sets a world record time of 67d12h3m.
1891-07-12: George Francis Train arrives in Fairhaven, Washington and sets a world record time of 64d, breaking his old record.
1913-08-06: Andre Jaeger-Schmidt, Henry Frederick, and John Henry Mears reach New York and set a world record time of 36d.
2023-04-24: Big Boy's Story Mode entry, revolving around a run to be accomplished by him, is created. If successful, Big Boy would become the first steam locomotive ever to circumnavigate the world.
Routing
The route Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout took is to begin in London, England and make the following trips, updated to the present day:
- Trains to Paris, Turin, and Brindisi
Taking the train from London to Brindisi via Paris and Turin is still possible today. For the trip to Paris, you'll have to make the following trips:- Eurostar high-speed train to Gare du Nord
- Walk to Gare de Lyon
- TGV high-speed train to Torino Porta Susa
- Walk to Torino Porta Nuova
- Frecciabianca high-speed train to Brindisi
- Steamship to Suez, File:Flag of Yemen.svg Aden, and File:Flag of India.svg Mumbai
- Trains to File:Flag of India.svg Prayagraj and File:Flag of India.svg Kolkata
- Steamer to File:Flag of Singapore.svg Singapore and File:Flag of Hong Kong.svg Hong Kong
- Steamers to File:Flag of China.svg Shanghai and Yokohama
- Steamer to San Francisco
- Trains to Salt Lake City, File:Flag of Wyoming.svg Medicine Bow, File:Flag of Nebraska.svg Kearney, File:Flag of Nebraska.svg Omaha, File:Flag of Illinois.svg Chicago, and File:Flag of New York.svg New York
Despite American trains not being as sleek as their European counterparts, it is still possible to go from San Francisco to New York, by making the following trips:- BART Blue Line to Oakland Coliseum
- Amtrak Capitol Corridor to Emeryville
- Amtrak California Zephyr to Chicago
- Amtrak Lake Shore Limited to New York
- Steamer to Cobh and trains to Dublin, Liverpool, and London
This article is a work in progress. ...Well, all the articles here are, in a way. But this one moreso, and the article may contain incomplete information and editor's notes. |
A route partially inspired by this page is to begin in Chicago, File:Flag of Illinois.svg Illinois, United States and make the following trips:
- Amtrak Lake Shore Limited to New York, File:Flag of New York.svg New York, United States
- Cunard transatlantic crossing to Southampton, England aboard Queen Mary 2
- South Western Railway train to Horsham
- Thameslink train to St. Pancras, London
- Eurostar high-speed train to Brussels South, Belgium
- ICE high-speed train to Cologne, Germany
- DB train to Hamburg
- SJ EuroNight train to Stockholm, Sweden via Copenhagen, Denmark
- Walk or subway to port
- Ferry to Turku, Finland via Mariehamn, File:Flag of Åland.svg Åland
- VR train to Toijala
- VR train to Helsinki
- Lev Tolstoy train to Leningradsky station, Moscow, Russia
- Walk to Yaroslavsky station
- China Railway K4 train to Beijing, File:Flag of China.svg China
- China Railway high-speed train to Shanghai
- Walk to port
- Ferry to Osaka, Japan
- Tokaido Shinkansen high-speed train to File:Flag of Tokyo Metropolis.svg Tokyo
- Any transpacific cruise to Vancouver, File:Flag of British Columbia.svg British Columbia, Canada
- Amtrak Cascades to Seattle, File:Flag of Washington.svg Washington, United States
- Amtrak Empire Builder to Chicago, File:Flag of Illinois.svg Illinois, United States
Transit Relay
The first World Transit Relay, which could be the first Transit Relay in general, takes place along a route inspired by Fogg et al.'s 80-day circumnavigation. There are 23 legs, and stationed in each of the checkpoints will be 23 teams of 4 that will pass a harbor seal plush in exchange for a baton. Once the group finishes the leg, they are free to tour the city. This run wouldn't count, though, as planes are used; besides, it isn't meant to be a speedrun. The checkpoints are:
- Piccadilly Circus, London
- Eiffel Tower, Paris
- Parco del Valentino, Turin
- Colonne Romane, Brindisi
- Suez Stadium, Suez
- Gateway of India Mumbai, Mumbai
- Chandrashekhar Azad Park, Prayagraj
- Eden Gardens, Kolkata
- Gardens by the Bay, Singapore
- Avenue of Stars, Hong Kong
- The Bund, Shanghai
- Yamashita Park, Yokohama
- Golden Gate Park, San Francisco
- Temple Square, Salt Lake City
- Public Park, Medicine Bow
- Alley Rose, Kearney
- Heartland of America Park at The RiverFront, Omaha
- Wrigley Field, Chicago
- Washington Square Park, New York
- St. Colman’s Cathedral, Cobh
- St Stephen’s Green, Dublin
- Anfield, Liverpool