The future can seem bleak. The planet is sort of melting, as with the minds of young people who stare at screens all day and the American electorate, who may put Donald Trump in the White House. But there is one bright spot to look forward to, in the form of golden arches, with the promise of unlimited fried potatoes.

A new 6,500-square-foot McDonald’s franchise in St. Joseph, Missouri, which is billing itself as the McDonald’s of the future, is one reason to hope. The fast-food joint will be outfitted with armchairs and couches in “earthy tones,” according to St. Joseph News-Press. Customers will order on “larger than life” kiosks that that will allow them to customize a wide array of menu items—from personalized burgers and chicken sandwiches, all the way to dessert items. The t: all-you-can-eat french fries.

“There really are hundreds of different choices to build the burger of your dreams,” Chris Habiger told the News Press. “Today’s customers seek a comfortable and inviting atmosphere. So we’re committed to providing a modern look and feel to this restaurant.”

It is questionable just how modern bucketsful of fried food are, as more and more millennial customers veer away from the Big Mac in favor of big bowls of kale (or something equally as “clean” and Instagram-able). McDonald’s and all of its fast-food compatriots have been grappling with the shift in American eating habits, which, for companies built on the idea of being a guilty, delicious bodily sin, could seem like a death sentence. (Sales at its stores over the last several years aren’t doing much to dispel this idea.)

McDonald’s has tried to compensate by adding healthier choices to its menus, but customers don’t seem to be biting. In fact, earlier this week The Wall Street Journal reported that it’s removing wraps from its menus because no self-respecting millennial was going to McDonald’s to buy a wrap. Where it has found salvation is going back to basics, and hitting those fundamentals harder. Its decision to extend its breakfast menu to last all day buoyed its stock price 32 percent in the last year.

So maybe going full-throttle with the unbridled unhealthiness in the St. Joseph store is just what McDonald’s needs. No one is going to McDonald’s to diet. They’re going to stuff their face with seven days’ worth of calories, and that’s O.K. Maybe, in the future, the lesson will be that we all should drop the airs and accept who we are. Perhaps this really is the next next wave of fast food after all.