Black Rain



"Black rain? Dang. After all these firestorms that followed after the blast, black rain can SERIOUSLY kill you, not to quench your thirst. I know that's WAY too dangerous, and it's so sticky, large, and even radioactive that might give you years of suffering. Well, that's right. Rain was supposed to be clear, not to look like black fluid. If you drink this, you'll have to suffer a slow, agonizing death of either cancer, or leukemia. I remember that when I was watching a documentary film about the atomic bombing of Hiroshima back then."

--Su Ji-Hoon, Kuroi Ame

Black rain (Japanese: 黒い雨; tr. Kuroi ame) can be fallen in cumulonimbus flammagenitus clouds, like both Hiroshima and Nagasaki particularly for example (particularly).

Don't open your mouth and drink it when it comes, because that's too dangerous. If you try to do so, your throat might've been parched, but it would've been difficult to capture it into your mouth.

The rain is made black by ash and smoke, which has been sucked up into the rising mushroom cloud, when these ashes mixed with cool, humid air, so in the upper atmosphere, they form thick, black raindrops, and fall back down onto the nuclear explosion-affected area.

The drops of rain are big enough to hurt when they hit your skin. It descends in a torrent, black fluid, which flows when the rain falls. It would rain black fluid.

If you drank the rain, you'd realize that it's highly radioactive. In time, it would poison many thousands, so don't drink the black rain in case of a nuclear catastrophe! It's for your own health and for humanity's sake.

Also, after the Great Firestorm and before a nuclear winter happens, black rain COULD fall down during the Last Day, but the only way to counter the black rain and all of its radioactive effects (or fallout for short) for all spared cities are the Anti-Black Rain Dome, which are made out of silicon.

Black rain can also be drinkable if purified by a Black Rain Purifier (a type of water purifier that clears black rainwater from radioactive materials).