It's WestWorld, but not as Maeve knows it — here's every similarity between the original park and Westworld season 4's Golden Age. Each season of HBO's Westworld brings a new historical era to life. From the wild west in season 1, feudal Japan in season 2 and World War II in season 3 (that was a simulation actually, never mind), Westworld season 4 resurrects 1920s prohibition with all its glamorous gangster fun. Built by the new leader of Delos — a Charlotte Hale host developed from Dolores' personality — Maeve and Caleb visit the Golden Age quite by accident, walking headfirst into certain doom.
Westworld's parks prove Delos isn't afraid of cutting corners. Each follows the same basic framework, with narratives, hosts and locations all resembling the company's original wild west resort. Despite the new landlords, Golden Age is no different. Aaron Paul's Caleb might be experiencing his first dose of mechanical paradise, but it's all too familiar for Maeve, who looks beyond the prohibition-era coat of paint and sees her same old prison.
Related: Why Maeve’s Powers Don’t Work In Westworld Season 4, Episode 2
Not much fun for Maeve, perhaps, but great for Westworld viewers, who can feast upon the Easter eggs and crossovers between Golden Age and WestWorld. Here are the hosts, the in-park storylines, and the subtle details giving audiences déjà vu in Westworld season 4.
Just as Teddy entered Sweetwater on a train during the very earliest scenes of Westworld season 1, the Golden Age adventure begins in similar fashion, with Caleb and Maeve exiting the station directly onto the main street of a town called Temperance. Indeed, it was the ominous lurch of a train journey that first made Maeve realize they were being escorted
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