Using her wits, Tulip smuggled her mirror-counterpart out of the confinement of her chrome car.
To recap MT's debut back in "Chrome Car," Tulip and her gang found themselves in a chrome world where reflections have agency and life. Mirror Tulip, or MT ( Ashley Johnson ), is essentially a train native who doesn't fit in with her assigned purpose. Now that the main heroine, Tulip, has concluded her story and made it home, someone else carries her torch, although she wouldn't be happy to be defined to her proximity to Tulip. The natural order must be that the train denizens must help the human passengers, but one denizen is an individual disruptor of the idea. Now that One-One has his Conductor mantle back, he has prepared his human charges instruction videos with more clear-cut guidelines, but his guide isn't quite clear-cut for some individuals in the ecosystem. Passengers must do good deeds or mature in emotional understandings to lower their score to zero and activate their exit door so they may return to the normal world as a healed or reformed person. Humans are tattooed with a glowing number on their palm that can go up or down. The rollie spherical droid One-One ( Jeremy Crutchley as Glad-One, Dennis as the Sad-One ) has reclaimed his rightful place as the Conductor.Īs it went in Book One, humans who suffered a trauma like its first protagonist and are in need of life lessons are taken aboard a cryptic train of limitless cars, each housing surreal worlds and inhabitants. A new world-or restored-order infuses the adventure aboard the Infinity Train after the events of season one.
Owen Dennis's animated anthology series Infinity Train stretches as infinite as its possibilities.