The Little Suburbs is a government sectioned social experiment to verify whether parents are a real necessity. Cities who volunteer for the experiment will build a new part of their neighborhoods specifically for the kids. These neighborhoods include at least 5 houses, one grocery store, one park, one cinema, one church, and one restaurant. In some cities, you will find a toy store, an electronics store, a hardware store, and a clothing store. In bigger cities you will find one supermarket in place of individual stores. Every house must include a basement, pool, one camera in the kitchen, a TV (hooked into both Cable and OTA), a computer, an AM/FM radio, a weather radio, and one telephone. The telephone must be able to connect to all other houses, the headquarters, emergency services, and switching stations to make nationwide and international calls, but it should be noted they cannot receive calls outside of Little Suburbs. Currently, the amount of cities participating in the experiment are over 1,000 excluding the 50 state capital. The kids in Little Suburbs are usually orphans, those taken from abusive parents, or signed up for a temporary visit by parents. Little Suburbs is also a testing ground for Nutrition Orbs, a new product to aid the fight against world hunger. One orb is clearly labeled with what it becomes when exposed to microwave radiation, and it takes 10 seconds to fully form in a typical microwave oven. However, every house has all kitchen appliances in case a child wants to try real cooking. Kids are not allowed smartphones and there is no cellular data access in Little Suburbs. Kids also don't have to worry about money; everything that is stocked inside the store(s) is free for the taking and can be returned at no additional charge at any time. Each house has waterproof furniture, in case a child has incontinence, not fully potty trained, or the toilet needs repair. Each house is also within one block from each other, so roads and cars are not necessary except for commercial use like garbage trucks, moving vans, emergency vehicles, and school busses among others. Finally, some Little Suburbs have a train station. This doesn't apply to all cities; just the ones that had space next to a railroad. Kids can board Amtrak trains and travel as much as they want, provided they will return. Same with the airport. If a kid wants to take a plane nationwide or international, they call HQ and arrange the flight from there. Likewise, the kid calls HQ for any train tickets.