Describe a city using only one-syllable words, try to guess other posters' cities

Buffalo

A tougher one: town in the same state as Town of Wind, but not as big. On a land vein named for the state. There’s a plant that makes farm tools (the big kind), and also one that moves corn or beans. The town stinks!

Peoria

Weird Al can’t spell its name. (Well, he can spell the first four parts of it.)

I’ve had a few that no one’s guessed yet myself. Perhaps give everyone 24 hours to guess, then add more clues? And if no one’s guessed yours, yet, you can use it as your first description? Or do as the Topic Playlist thread does, and pass to the first person who wants to jump in with a new description?

Albuquerque.

I’ll retry one of mine:

Where Lee shot John and Jack shot Lee.

A good idea as the thread’s currently set up. Not so good if it’s going to stop for 24 hours every time somebody puts one up that isn’t guessed.

Dallas?

I am a little afraid to play now cause there seems to be uncertainty about the rules. I’ll wait til it’s sorted out lest I offend :slightly_smiling_face:

Well, maybe it would be best if @HeyHomie (the OP) weigh in on what they think would be good.

I’ll admit my bias was towards it becoming a long-running thread game like the Botticellis or Free Association, but there’s nothing wrong with having a quick burst of fun and then fading away.

I really rather prefer the current free for all.

There you have it, folks! Take it away!

Correct.

Dikes and weed.

Amsterdam? (The old one?)

Cow town with a drawl. Spot on well known cow trail. Butch and the Kid got shot here, so to speak. A local tale says a big cat slept here and left it’s mark on the town lore

Yes! You are correct.

Easy peasy! Tucson.

Easy because I live here.

A town in the north east of the state that leads it.

South Bend?

Mine already got solved upthread. It’s Detroit.

In the state named for the small brown nut that comes from the tree of the same name is a town on a Great Lake. There’s a yuge theme park there. There’s a myth (or is it true?) that a group of old men are in charge of all things, you just don’t know it. A myth (or is it true?) states that the town’s street grid is based on the group’s mark - which is to say, two tools with which to cut stone and they make a square.