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Samurai World, Shogun World, and Sensei World are speculative names for another of the Delos Destinations, Inc. parks - a 'sister park' to Westworld. An "SW" logo is seen in "The Bicameral Mind" when Maeve, Felix, Hector and Armistice flee to a floor that appears similar to the Behavioral levels within the Westworld Mesa Hub. Some feudal Japanese warriors hosts are rehearsing actions, and they take no notice of the escapees. Other hosts stand passively.

Location

It should be noted that the content seen on the "SW" floor is not a park. This area seems to be the equivalent of Westworld's Behavior Lab and Diagnostics. It contains hosts and branding that may be for either an existing park or a park in the planning stages.

It is unclear where the new park may be located, if it exists at all yet. The topographical map in the Westworld control room seems to only display the Westworld park.

Other Parks

There are clues that Westworld is not the only park:

Name

The show's creators, Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, have said that the name of the SW park could be Samurai World, Shogun World, or even Sensei World. They said these are all "good guesses". [1] In and interview, Nolan speaks of his love of Samurai movies. A few Samurai films have been remade into Westerns (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samurai_cinema#Influence_on_western_cinema). Western film director, Sergio Leone, based the "man with no name" in A Fistful of Dollars on the main character in Akira Kurosawa's movie, Yojimbo. (Sanjuro is a sequel with the same unnamed main character).

In the Entertainment Weekly interview, Nolan incorrectly states that Sergio Leone made films based on "The Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven". The truth is that director Akira Kurosawa created Seven Samurai (1954), and John Sturges directed an adaptation of Kurosawa's film (The Magnificent Seven).[citation needed]

Concept of Multiple Parks

The multiple-park concept comes from Michael Crichton's 1973 film Westworld. In the opening scene of that film, Ed Ramsey describes the theme park (named Delos) as containing three worlds: "Medieval World, Roman World, and, of course, Westworld."

Medieval and Roman World are shown briefly during the 1973 film. The film's protagonist flees from the gunslinger robot through Westworld, and then makes his way into Roman World and finally Medieval World.

In the movie Futureworld, Westworld is deserted. It has been replaced with: Spa World and Futureworld. Near the end of the film, Futureworld, the antagonists see three Japanese feudal warriors.

Nolan has stated Medieval World and Roman World will not appear in Westworld.[citation needed]

References

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