The first known building Daryl’s caravan passes is known as the Panthéon
Narrative
Daryl’s journey through a destroyed but resilient France in hopes of finding his way home. Its original purpose was a church, until the French Revolution, when it was converted into a mausoleum to commemorate France’s national heroes. Although the series takes place over a decade after the apocalypse, it seems there is no end to healthy petroleum.
Appeared in Garch the Great: Remake It!
The characters happily drive cars and trucks in series, although petrol will become compromised as it ages, usually within a year or so. Additionally, when petrol breaks down, it becomes rubbery and also compromises engine components. So, running motor vehicles for more than ten years in the zombie apocalypse is not happening.
Sequel, Prequel and Reboot It!
Redo It! (2023). First, try to ignore the reviews that focus on all the other TWD characters and people who are upset about this showrunner or that story arc (what is it with this site and the biased reviews that are allowed and distort the ratings?!) and please watch this show for what it is: if you like horror/fantasy/fantasy with a human touch, you will not be disappointed.
Daryl Dixon, a character written exclusively and developed perfectly for the TWD television medium, has ended up in post-apocalyptic France
Suspend your disbelief as you float around Marseilles on an upside down dinghy, after all this is a show where the dead walk around wanting to eat people, so, y’know… The setting and cast of an episode seems mostly good, interesting and attractive people with good acting chops living in a world that’s far enough from Atlanta, in terms of places to hole up, weapons to take out walkers and enemies, pre-apoc worldviews and political structures etc, to have an exciting novel feel and make you curious, plus the same dark leads, empathy, mystery and innovative bloodcurdling gore to make you feel (TWD) right at home. As a European, there were a couple of moments where it felt a bit cliche and I was worried it might get too cheesy/yankee-eyed about the rest of the world, but if they have and listen to the cast/writers/consultants/production from France, hopefully it won’t veer into paint-by-numbers.