If this is what the room for the USA looks like, you really want to see what all the other countries' sections look like, so you walk straight down the hallway and go through the door with the map of the world on it to find yourself in another hallway full of more doors, each with the flag of a different country, like you saw through the window. In contrast to the elaborate room you were in before, this hallway is very plain, simply consisting of the doors themselves and bare walls without any decoration. Turning around, you see that the door for the US is just one door among many without anything other than the flag to set it apart. You frown briefly as that sense of patriotism flares up again, but you get over it and decide to explore instead. This hallway is much longer than the ones you were in before, and it makes sense that it would have to be to have a room for every country in the world, which it very well seems to. There are doors bearing all the flags you can recognize and a lot you can't, and you can't actually see where the hallway ends in either direction. The doors themselves are grouped geographically, with Canada on one side of the American door and Mexico on the other, with the rest of Latin America following after it. The doors with the flags of the European, Asian, African, and Middle Eastern countries are all clustered together. After walking up and down the hallway for a bit you finally give in to your curiosity and go through the door marked with the flag of...