This is the most canonically accurate blueprint of the Destiny's Bounty 1.0 ever made. I went through 10+ episodes and the wikipedia to design this. This took at least 4+ days of research. Let me tell you this-
The animators DID NOT PLAN THIS SHIT ACCURATELY
There is a staircase that goes directly into the ceiling. Windows that don't exist. Every room has two doors. On the main deck, there's the doorway that they never go into.
I've been thinking about this post and decided to do some research.
I went through the transcripts of Cole's D.R. episodes* and found these results**
Cole has a total of 327 lines so far in Dragons Rising S1.A-S3.A, totaling 27 episodes where he speaks.
Based on the post above, I searched for three (3) topics within his dialogue - Danger (Death, Injury, Threats), Merge (Merged Lands, Monasteries), Finders (talking directly to or about them). Anything that has a .5 is due to a line being split between two topics (i.e. Danger/Finders, Merge/Danger, etc)
Currently, as of Season 3 Part 1:
Cole's lines consist of 84.5 sentences about these topics out of 327 total lines.
25.8% of all lines to Danger, Merge, Finders
Danger: 20 / 327 - 6.11%
Merge: 18.5 / 327 - 5.66%
Finders: 47 / 327 - 14.37%
S1: 26 / 65 - 40%
Danger: 8 / 26 - 30.7%
Merge: 4 / 26 - 15.4%
Finders: 14 / 26 - 53.8%
S2: 55.5 / 256 - 21.67%
Danger: 11.5 / 55.5 - 20.7%
Merge: 12.5 / 55.5 - 22.5%
Finders: 31.5 / 55.5 - 56.75%
Note: Most of these lines come from S2.A
S3: 4 / 6 - 66.6%
Danger: .5 / 6 - 8.3%
Merge: 2 / 6 - 33.3%
Finders: 1.5 / 6 - 25%
*One episode didn't have a transcript, so I had to watch the episode. All lines are an approximation, not sentences.
** Results are not 100% accurate, but as close as I can get them
Don't ask me why I did this, I love researching stupid shit
I'm gonna rant about Zane for a moment so bear with me
Zane's Motif is Humanity and Betrayal.
From his first conversations with the group, to his chapter book, to Night of the Nindroids, to Tournament of Elements, to SOG/Hunted/MOTO, to the Ice Emperor, to Crystalized, and now Dragons Rising- there is a repetition of Zane not being human. 'He's not like us'. 'He's weird... no, he's weird weird.'
Going into the Pilot Era (Season 0 through S1E6 The Snake King), Zane was always different in how he spoke, acted, and almost existed. Part of this is the brilliant voice acting by Brent Miller- he/Zane speaks very eloquently, a bit monotone but still full of emotion. "Yes. It was a joke. Ha, ha." "The Golden Weapons have left this realm and are now in the Underworld. The end is drawing near." Zane is blunt in how he speaks, yet internally he's in pain. He doesn't know where he comes from, where his family is, or who is family is. One of my favorite lines is from the early chapter books, Kai: Ninja of Fire. "I envy you." "No, I envy the fact that you know they're gone." Zane, at this point, is orphaned with no memory of his family. Kai decides to drop everything to help Zane find his old village and look for any sign of his past (fun fact: Zane and Kai are drugged in his book, I'm dead serious). Although, they do not find anything to help Zane and his past, it allows the pair to bond and grow closer.
In Zane's own chapter book, he is tempted by Garmadon for information about his past. If he gives up the Golden Weapons (and betrays his friends), Garmadon would tell him about his family and their whereabouts. This is the first of numerous instances of someone in power tempted Zane with something he desires, but to achieve it he would have to betray his friends. Zane is tempted. He misses the idea of what his family could be, the false idea of where he came from. Zane, of course, doesn't fall for it, but it's a lingering wonder of is Garmadon telling the truth? Did he really know who Zane's family was? Were they still alive, looking for him?
My favorite graphic novel, (other than the first volume, The Challenge of Samukai), is Night of the Nindroids. This book, taking place between the Art of the Silent Fist and Blackout, focuses on Zane and his feeling of isolation. Yes, he's a ninja, but he's a nindroid. Is he truly on the right team, or should he be with his own kind? In NITN, Zane is separated from the team and brought to the Overlord (Garmadon calls him a "toaster with attitude").
"What are you afraid of? Or can a collection of nuts and bolts even feel fear? No, you can't. Not fear, not hate, not even love, just imitations of those feelings. You are a robot. But I have the power to make you more! Defeat the other ninja for me, and I will transfer your mind into one of their bodies! I will make you human!" the Overlord to Zane.
On a side note: Night of the Nindroids is an incredibly fucked up concept. Zane would get to choose who's body he would take over, inevitably killing the original person. He chooses Kai, meaning (if) he went through with it, he would be living in Kai's body while Kai himself is dead. :)
Back to the point. Zane is tempted with the idea of becoming human. Of feeling emotions, of being able to get hurt, of "feeling the sun on your skin", of being normal. And, he does agree to work with the Overlord (as mentioned previously, choosing Kai's body to inhabit). He, single-handedly, takes down Cole, Jay, and Kai. Zane, though, doesn't want Lloyd anywhere near the events so he sends him away to bond with Sensei Garmadon, but he also sends Nya on a mission. He knows that Nya is intelligent and needs her out of the way for everything to succeed. Even the cover itself shows Zane's separation from the team; while Kai/Jay/Cole are caught, Zane is in front with his internal systems being revealed. He's even in his damaged appearance, showing the mechanics under his false skin. I won't spoil it, because it is a fantastic graphic novel, but it shows that Zane by himself is incredibly strong and powerful.
Tournament of Elements is the death of Human!Zane and the introduction of Titanium!Zane. In his previous appearance, he was able to pass as a human, unless he was drastically injured, but now, in his titanium form, it's even more obvious that he's different. He has PTSD and panic attacks from his encounter with Death. Zane, at this point in time, is the only one who's died and come back, further separating him from being human. But, I feel like, this could aid in his desire for humanity. He knows how precious life is, he knows how easily things can go from bad to impossible. His whole reasoning for living is "to protect those who cannot protect themselves"- from an outside perspective, it's a way for him to be a hero. But, on a deeper level, its almost a suicidal way of seeing things. He was built to face the danger so others wouldn't. Now, that's just my perspective on that.
The Oni Trilogy brings in Zane's cloaking. A way for him to be human again, while still being himself. He's able to switch between blending into the crowd in plain sight versus being himself. Though this does not change how he acts, it allows him a cover especially for when he needs to be hidden (Snake Jaguar).
Now. The Ice Emperor. Arguably the opposition to Zane himself. The Ice Emperor is what could've happened if someone found pre-pilot Zane and used him for their own selfish desires. Both start out as someone with no memories, no compass, just a lost child. Zane, pre-pilot, finds the village he later lives in and allows himself to be aided. Here, he is given things to do and ways to help others before being given the chance, by Wu, to find and better himself. The Ice Emperor is turned into a weapon. He's not allowed to think for himself, every decision is made and manipulated by Vex. The dialogue between IE and Vex is repetitious. The Ice Emperor is stripped of his humanity, betraying himself in the process. His powers are used to cause pain and suffering, killing Krag's family, freezing the Formlings, and causing a realm-wide ice age.
Even how the Ice Emperor sits on his throne shows how captive he is to Vex. Every time that IE moves from the throne, he has to shatter the layer of ice that forms over his arms/body. He's constantly asleep/powered down, possibly due to the amount of energy the Staff is demanding (especially for holding it for so many decades).
Crystalized is the closest Zane gets to voluntarily losing his humanity. the Ice Emperor was forcefully stripped from him, but Crystalized has him choose to lock his emotions away. He doesn't know how to deal with the grief of losing Nya. Even being with Pixal and Cole can't get him out of his depressive funk. It takes an outside perspective of allowing emotions out for him to see that its okay to be emotional, that being emotional is being human.
There are whole buildings that are fully submerged, and the height of a skyscraper is at minimum 492 feet or 150 meters. So this range is anywhere between 75-150 meters of seawater flooding the city. That means the seawater flowed inland between 50 to 150+ miles, not including following rivers/tributaries.
Seabound was a mass casualty event. Whether it is seen or not, full buildings were submerged for several days with little warning. Cars were abandoned. If people remained in Ninjago City during the Garmadon/SOG attack, how many people were still in the City when the flood hit? How many people drowned in a desperate attempt to escape?