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by futurix 3263 days ago
Once people see others walking towards a platform (particularly if they just checked something on their phones), they tend to do the same.
2 comments

But there are lots of trains leaving at any given time going to different places. There's no way to know which train somebody is heading to without asking them.
There aren't that many leaving simultaneously - plus they tend to be slotted into the same group of platforms.
Yes there are. That's the whole problem. It's complete chaos. There are several hundred people huddled in one area looking at one giant screen and there are several trains being called in sequence. How would you know that a given person was waiting for the 4:30pm Acela to Union Station to be called and not the 4:33pm Northeast Regional to Boston?

As somebody who commuted for a long time at peak rush hour back and forth from Penn Station to D.C., I can tell you that following people who "seem to know where they're going" would not be a reliable strategy.

There are dozens of platforms going to different places. Picking a random stranger and following them isn't going to get you where you're going.