#cade pond
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ellorycade · 1 year ago
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My reflection just stared back at me.
First, it sounded somewhat muted in the clearing. It didn’t look like too many humans came around this way and it almost seemed to stand still. I set my pack and stick down against a big birch tree. It was odd to see so many white birches in this circle. I hadn’t seen one on the walk thus far. Anyways, as I knelt by the pond, I felt someone staring at me. I look up into the water’s ripples and it’s me - or my reflection? It was as if the pond took a photo of me as I walked up. I could see slow movements in myself, but I wasn’t moving, just staring.
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razorblade-richards26 · 3 months ago
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dally and Johnny moments
Dallas Winston: played by Joshua Boone
Johnny Cade: played by sky Lakota lynch
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Scene: The Abandoned Lot – Late Afternoon
Dallas and Johnny are sitting on the hood of a car, sharing a cigarette and talking about life.
Dallas: (exhaling smoke) You know, kid, you gotta toughen up. This world ain't kind to softies.
Johnny: (nodding) I know, Dally. I just... sometimes it's hard, you know?
Dallas: (patting his shoulder) Yeah, I get it. But you got us. We look out for our own.
Johnny: (smiling slightly) Thanks, Dally. That means a lot.
Dallas: (grinning) Don't mention it. Now, let's go raise some hell.
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Scene: The Curtis House – Evening
Johnny and Dallas are playing cards on the porch, with Dallas teaching Johnny a new game.
Dallas: (dealing cards) Alright, kid, this one's called Poker. It's all about reading the other guy.
Johnny: (concentrating) Got it. So, what's the first step?
Dallas: (smirking) First step is to always keep a straight face. No matter what.
Johnny: (trying to keep a straight face) Like this?
Dallas: ………….eeeeeehhhhhh Not bad, but You'll get there.
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Scene: The Abandoned Lot – Evening
Johnny and Dallas are sitting around a small fire, talking about their dreams and aspirations.
Johnny: (staring into the fire) Sometimes, I just wish things were different, you know?
Dallas: (nodding) Yeah, I get that. But we gotta play the hand we're dealt.
Johnny: (sighing) I guess so. But it's tough.
Dallas: (patting his back) You're tougher. Don't forget that.
Johnny: (smiling) Thanks, Dally. You're a good friend.
Dallas: (grinning) Don't get all mushy on me now, kid. Let's just enjoy the fire.
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Scene: The Park – Afternoon
Johnny and Dallas are skipping stones on a pond. Johnny is trying to get the hang of it while Dallas shows off his skills.
Dallas: (skipping a stone) See? It's all in the wrist.
Johnny: (trying) Like this?
Dallas: (laughing) Almost. Just a little more flick.
Johnny: (sighing) I'll get it someday.
Dallas: (patting his back) You will, kid. You will.
(after note, just want to let you guys know that I wrote dairy still really tough, but a lot more caring and sympathetic to Johnny because that’s how I saw him in the musical)
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meat-the-sullivans · 8 months ago
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*Aster knew when the day began that it wasn’t going to be a hood one, everything felt off from the beginning and only got worse as time went on.*
*By noon he was aimlessly wandering the yard with the white rabbit in his grasp, the blade inside long since un sheathed from the plushie. Trying to find things that were never there, struggling to tell reality from fantasy, and struggling more to place where he was to begin with.*
*sully arrives home from work and does his check go the house as usual. He sees dipper happily playing in her room, and a note from Cade saying he went to candies. He checks the house up and down but can’t seem to find aster anywhere*
Aster? *he calls out finally going into the backyard that faces the pond and the woods*
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lunamagicablu · 6 months ago
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Ognuno di noi sceglie i suoi specchi: c'è chi si specchia nella luna e si riempie di luce, c'è chi si specchia nelle acque di uno stagno e cade nel fango. – Rosita Matera ******************** Each of us chooses our mirrors: there are those who look at themselves in the moon and are filled with light, there are those who look at themselves in the waters of a pond and fall into the mud. – Rosita Matera
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everettcannon · 8 months ago
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Everett stood by the duck pond, two rings remaining in his hand, two tosses left to land one on the little red duck's head and win a prize. He grinned over at Cade. "I'm gonna get this, and I'm give you the prize, and you're gonna have to carry around a big fluffy teddy bear for the rest of the night." It was a threat, but it was also genuine -- and a way to lay claim to Cade in a visible way, a way everyone could see.
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@cade-bentley
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clonetroopertournament · 2 years ago
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Round 1 Matches Have Been Decided
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Match-ups written out below the cut (With links to the polls)
Side 1:
Dogma vs. Echo
Gree vs. Boost
Ponds vs. Crys
Droidbait vs. Hevy
Hound vs. Glitch
Zak vs. Sinker
Wyler vs. Nova
Colt vs. Warthog
Hunter vs. Stone
Slick vs. Wilco
Wolffe vs. Wrecker
Longshot vs. Crosshair
Hardcase vs. Bacara
Howzer vs. Del
Grey vs. Tech
Rex vs. Blitz
Side 2:
Fordo vs. Cody
Tup vs. Comet
Omega vs. Boba
Neyo vs. Bly
Cutup vs. Gregor
Cade vs. Slip
Monnk vs. Appo
Havoc vs. Sister
Fox vs. Fives
Kix vs. Wooley
Thire vs. Coric
Matchstick vs. Thorn
Waxer vs. Boil
Darman Skirata vs. Cut Lawquane
99 vs Alpha-17
Vaughn vs. Jesse
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cartoonus-maximus · 6 months ago
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Notes and Observations on FNAF TFTP Vol 4: Submechanophobia
Whoo! 4 out of 8 books down! Halfway there and livin' on a prayer, ya'll.
But I really enjoyed this volume. It was my favorite so far, and the first one of this set that I've rated a 5 stars. I would genuinely reread this one.
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I think the cover image is great. Even though, much like the one with Lally, the image doesn't match the description of the character being depicted. In this case, the cover is an image of Delilah the mermaid animatronic, who in the story is described as having red hair and a missing eye. She's also not a prominent animatronic, and is mostly just set dressing in the story she's in. But I still really love this cover art, so I'm not complaining about it.
As always, these are just some of my notes and observations made while listening to the audiobook, which I borrowed from my local library. Fair warning: there will be spoilers. If you want the whole experience for yourself, you should skip this and go read/listen to the book yourself first.
Here are my observations on the other books from this series if you're interested.
Let's take a dip in this animatronic infested water, shall we?
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"Submechanophobia"
Submechanophobia -- the fear of submerged machines or other human-made objects, either partially or entirely underwater.
The animatronics and the water park in this story reminded me a lot of the titular "Felix the Shark" and the water park he was a part of. It's probably just because both this story and that one are the only ones to center around aquatic characters and spaces, while the rest of the franchise mainly centers on arcades and pizza restaurants.
It also reminds a lot of the footage I've seen of the 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea ride at Disney. Which makes sense -- images and footage of that ride are some of the first things to pop up if you search up the word "submechanophobia" online. I assume that ride and similar ones inspired most of this story.
This story takes place in "Freddy's Fantasy Water Park," a Fazbear water park. The water park features such attractions as "Bonnie's Sea Ponds" (swimming and diving pools), "Freddy's Treasures and Eatery," "Chica's Fairy Boats," and "Foxy's Island Water Slides." The water park is shaped like a giant wheel (or pizza, perhaps?), with each of these attractions circling around the center attraction, "The Mechaquarium," an impressive aquarium tank full of swimming animatronics.
Our protagonist of the story is Caden Wykowski, a young employee at the water park. Caden is a mechanic and fresh out of high school. He's previously worked at another animatronic restaurant called "Penguin Pizzeria," so he understands robot maintenance and repairs. Caden lives with and cares for his grandmother, who is his only family and has raised him since he was a little kid. His parents were 'lost at sea' when he was little. Boss man Martin specifically hired Caden to take care of the Mechaquarium and the animatronics inside, which haven't been very well maintained. Caden suffers from submechanophobia and struggles every time he has to go work on the animatronics underwater.
(Getting really tired of Cades and Aidens and Cadens. Would love to hear about a protagonist named Tom. Or Eliza. Or Ben, or Juan, or Ramesh, or basically any name I haven't already heard in these books.)
This Fazbear water park is much older than the Pizzaplex. Over 20 years old, anyway. It sounds like the park was open alongside some of the older FNAF locations, potentially as early as the FNAFs 1 and 2 locations, but closed down for a number of years as public interest in Freddy & Co. dwindled. But, with the arrival and booming popularity of the Pizzaplex, the water park has been reopened, and is kept fairly busy by customers who are excited to have another way of engaging with Freddy Fazbear.
Because of the park's age, the underwater animatronics in the Mechaquarium aren't in the best state. They're older models of animatronics, and they've been underwater for years, and fallen into a state of disrepair. Their weathered state is clearly noticeable to anyone standing too close to the aquarium glass, so boss man Martin tells Caden and other employees to try to keep the customers a safe distance away; close enough to see the animatronics, but not close enough to get a good look at them.
The water park is located in a town called Meadowbrook. I swear this has been a previous location, but I may be misremembering things.
Caden's boss is a man named Martin Copper. He has a copper plated tooth in his mouth. Martin is the manager and owner of the water park. He's the original owner, and views the park as both his main source of income as well as a massive drain on his finances.
In addition to his boss, Caden has two coworkers. One is Eva, an older woman who works as the receptionist and runs the front desk. The other is Roy, a 30-year-old guy who works round the clock at the water park filling every other position. Both Eva and Roy have worked for Martin for years, with Eva even being the original receptionist from when the park was first opened.
Roy used to come to this water park as a kid, and has a lot of good memories of the place. Now, as an adult, Roy works at the park as the janitor, ride operator, food vendor, and security guard. (He's the janitor! He's the ride operator! He serves drinks and ice cream cones! He keeps unwanted guests out! What can't the amazing Roy do?!) The only job at the park that Roy hasn't ever performed is the animatronic technician (Caden's job). When Caden asks him about it, Roy says that he'd love to have the job but doesn't know enough about machines to handle it. Even so, throughout the story we see plenty of Roy being super attentive about the animatronics, despite being kept busy with everything else around the park, since he's usually the first person to notice when any of the animatronics of the Mechaquarium go offline.
The Mechaquarium contains an artificial coral reef and several water-themed animatronics, including a whole school of fish. Since none of animatronics are based around characters with names, Roy has named each of the bigger animatronics in the tank. The bigger animatronics include:
Zeus the sea dragon
Delilah the mermaid
Frank the scuba diver
Marco and Polo the twin sea serpents
Hank the Hammer, Mac the Muscle, and Sly, a trio of sharks
The mermaid animatronic breaks down in the middle of the day, and Caden has to put on a diving suit and dive into the aquarium to repair her. Caden hears a soft static-y sound when he enters the aquarium. He thinks it's just in his head, part of his phobia reaction, but… since we've already seen illusion disks in this series, it could be something more along those lines.
Caden gets the mermaid fixed up, and climbs out of the tank as quickly as possible. When he throws the switch to power up the Mechaquarium, all the animatronics turn back on, and go back to their usual semi-functional states.
(… Can I punch Daryl? I wanna punch Daryl.)
(Okay, I made fun of Caden's name, but I'm also puzzled about a 30-year-old named Roy and a 20-year-old named Daryl. I didn't know anyone younger than 75 had either of those names.)
Roy tells Caden that the animatronic shark he calls Hank just broke down. Not only is it broken down, but it's floating upside at the top of the tank like an actual dead fish. Caden sighs, but returns to his wetsuit anyway. He shuts down all of the animatronics before he climbs into the tank, but, while he's in the water, he gets surprised by the massive monstrous dragon (Zeus) seemingly appearing out of nowhere behind him, the robot's mouth wide open and pointed right at him. Terrified, Caden nearly has an episode; he forces himself through it. He repairs Hank the shark, then turns to climb out of the tank.
When he turns to climb out, he sees that Zeus has moved, the sea dragon now floating right between Caden and his exit. The sea dragon shouldn't be able to move at all right now -- it's motors and electric power are turned off, and there's not water currents in the tank powerful enough to move it. Regardless, the sea dragon floats closer to Caden, eventually pinning Caden against a wall. (Honestly, at this point, I would simply pass away.)
Staring straight into the jaws of the beast, Caden notices what looks like a loose wire stuck to something between some of the dragon's teeth. When he pulls on it, he realizes that it's a shoelace, attached to a child's shoe. Both the shoe and the animatronic's teeth are flecked with some sort of dark substance that, in the dim light of the aquarium, resembles blood.
Early the next day, Caden and Roy are doing prep work around the park. When they stop for a break, Caden, still thinking about the shoe, asks Roy about the history of the park, since Roy grew up with it.
"[The animatronics] were my friends back [when I was a child], anyway. I'd talk to them and it was like they would listen, y'know? Kid imagination stuff."
Caden tells Roy about finding a kid's shoe in the animatronic dragon's mouth. He says the shoe is old and falling apart, and that he thinks it's been in there awhile. Roy is taken aback at first, and seems just as confused as Caden is about it. They both decide that a kid must have gotten close enough to the tank to throw their shoe in at some point in the past, potentially as part of a prank or a dare.
Boss man Martin hears about the shoe and asks Caden some questions about it. (Caden hadn't brought it up to his boss, and he didn't turn the shoe in to the office or anything, so it makes sense for his boss to come asking about it.) Caden explains about finding the shoe and nothing else, assuming that some kid was playing a joke or something, and says he just threw the shoe away in the trash (which isn't true; he brought the shoe home with him). Martin listens to his story and lets Caden off the hook, but reminds him that he needs to tell the office about situations like this in the future.
Caden asks his boss about whether the underwater animatronics are supposed to move when they're powered off. Martin assures him that they don't, and says that other technicians who worked in the park in the past have asked him the same thing. He thinks the techs just get spooked when they're alone in the aquarium and imagine things. But Caden knows he's not imagining things.
Caden goes to check on the aquarium, and sees that the sea serpent Polo is down. He then receives a message from Roy, alerting him that Polo is down. (See what I mean about Roy being strangely attentive?)
Caden says a quick prayer before getting back into the tank. It's unspecified who or what he's praying to. (I mostly thought this was interesting because, while franchise creator Scott Cawthon has always been very upfront about his Christian faith and lifestyle, there aren't many moments throughout the franchise story itself where characters are portrayed having any strong religious-coded behaviors. It's a bit of a novelty.)
Climbing back into the tank, Caden has to swim past Frank the diver and Sly the shark before he can get to Polo the sea serpent. He feels gets the feeling that he's being watched. While working on repairing Polo, Caden notices the real moss and algae growing on the imitation rocks in the aquarium. He wishes Martin would get some experts in here to give the tank a proper cleaning, but when he brought it up to Martin before his boss only shook his head, complaining about the cost. He then notices that Frank the diver has moved, and seems to be observing him.
When Polo's repairs are finished, the animatronic jerks back online, its body thrashing violently for a moment. It hits the nearby rocks, and a piece of a rock breaks off. This rock chunk gets Caden's attention for some reason, and he pockets it, planning to get a better look at it when he gets out of the tank. When he gets a better look at it later, he realizes it's a small finger bone.
Caden's air supply suddenly cuts off, even though his air tank and apparatus are all in perfect condition. He's forced to swim past the animatronics so he can resurface and breathe again, all while feeling like the animatronics are watching him, and like they're shifting closer, as though to hem him in.
After resurfacing, Caden checks over his diving equipment. Taking care of the diving equipment is an important part of his job, so he always makes sure to refill the air tanks after he uses them. But, when he rechecks both his main and spare tanks, he realizes that they're mostly empty, a state he didn't leave them in the previous day. He wonders if someone has been using the diving equipment without his knowledge.
Uncertain why his equipment failed, Caden alerts office manager Eva about the incident, since boss man Martin isn't around. Eva says she'll tell Martin about it and insists Caden take the rest of the day off. She also gets frustrated with Martin for the lack of safety protocols at the water park, insisting that Caden should at least have a diving partner to make sure he doesn't get stuck in the tank or something. Caden insists he can do the job by himself, but takes the rest of the day off anyway.
With the day off, Caden goes to visit his grandmother in the nursing home she currently lives in. His grandmother has Alzheimer's, so Caden can't take care of her by himself anymore, but he tries to visit with her every day. They talk, but with her memory issues, they sometimes have the same conversations over and over; Caden is okay with this, and just likes talking to her. (I just thought this part was sweet.)
When Caden tells her about his new job at Freddy's Fantasy Water Park, his grandmother remembers hearing stories and gossip about the place when it first shut down. She's unable to remember exactly what the rumors were, but she knows there was some sort of mystery afoot.
That night, Caden has a nightmare. He's standing in front of the Mechaquarium, watching as children jump into the open tank. At first, the kids happily swim alongside the animatronics in the tank, but then the animatronics start attacking the children, tearing them apart and eating them like animals in a feeding frenzy. Caden thinks the animatronics look different; they look brand new, and their eyes are lit up "like they're possessed."
Caden tries to save the dying children, but is unable to. He's held back by a crowd of creepy, ghostly children, their hands locked tightly around him. Looking around, he sees Martin and Roy nearby. He tries to get their attention, calling out to them to help the kids, but his boss and coworker just quietly watch as the kids die, doing nothing to help.
Caden breaks free from the ghostly children's hands holding him back, only to be grabbed and held down by two adults. Staring at the adults holding him, he finds himself staring at his own deceased parents. The shock of it finally wakes him up from the dream.
The next morning, Caden distracts himself from his nightmares and phobias by focusing on dealing with a problem with his grandmother's medical insurance coverage. (Ugh, that's a whole other nightmare.) He goes looking for some paperwork she kept in her bedroom, and while there he finds a stack of newspapers that she's been hoarding for years. The paper on top has an article about his parents deaths. But, underneath that article, is another one that catches his attention - a boy named Jason Butterfield reported missing after a visit to Freddy's Fantasty Water Park.
The 20-year-old article explains that the family went to the water park in the evening, and then went home. The next day, their son was missing from his room, the bedroom window left wide open. No one knows if the boy was taken or ran away. A brief description of the missing boy mentions the shoes he was last seen wearing, and Caden realizes that the shoe he fished out of Zeus's mouth matches the description.
When Caden goes to work later that day, Roy comes around to check on him, having heard about the air tank failure and wanting to make sure Caden's okay. Caden asks if Roy if he knows anything about the disappearance of Jason Butterfield, and Roy tells him that he and Jason were the same age, and went to elementary school together; he explains that Jason was never found, and that for awhile a lot of people in the town grew suspicious that someone in the town had kidnapped him, but that eventually the rumors died down, most people forgot about the incident, and the rest of the Butterfield family moved away. Roy assumes Jason must have ran away, and doesn't think too much of it anymore. Roy is obviously suspicious of Caden's questions, but plays it off like he's not.
(Both Roy and Martin are being pretty sus right now.)
"One shelf was filled with remnants of old Freddy, Chica, and Foxy costumes." (Absofruitlyash voice: REMNANT?!) (Also, no Bonnie costume?)
(Sq… squid animatronic? There's a squid animatronic? Why oh why isn't that one in the Mechaquarium?! Put him in the water! Spooky tentacle underwater robot, let's go!)
There's a storage shed / workshop in the 'employee's only' section of the waterpark, where lots of unused or seasonal items are kept. The workshop area is where Caden's tools are kept, along with plenty of other tools and pieces for repairing things around the park. This is also where the squid animatronic is, since its motor doesn't work. When he's not busy with the upkeep of the other animatronics, Caden works on the squid, which is in a much worse state of disrepair than the rest of the water animatronics.
While Caden is in there working on the squid, all of the lights go off. A heavy shelf of metal falls and almost lands on Caden, and he hears someone breathing in the dark. Someone darts past him, slamming the shed door open and running out; Caden doesn't move fast enough to see who it is.
Caden tells Martin what happened, and he, Martin, and Roy work on putting the workshop back to rights. Martin believes that some teenagers are trying to play pranks on the park employees. For some reason, Roy thinks it's important that Caden specify that he 'didn't see anyone' when he was attacked in the workshop. Thinking about all the recent 'accidents' around him, Caden starts to wonder if someone is trying to kill him.
"After all these years… The kids are back, causing me trouble."
(… Okay, I no longer want to punch Darryl. I want him hit by a truck. Just a little love tap, that's all, I swear!)
"It was just a kind man asking about your grandmother. He doesn't know you have a finger bone in your backpack." XD
Caden wants to go to the police with his findings, but decides he'll need more proof than a single shoe and a tiny bone.
Caden suits up, and goes diving around in the Mechaquarium tank. He studies the rocks on the bottom for awhile, looking to see if any more bones or clothing items are down there. When he looks up, he finds that all of the animatronics are circled around him, watching him. Swallowing his fear and choosing to ignore them for the moment, Caden continues searching. To his horror, he finds the top part of a child's skull.
A noise gets Caden's attention, and he looks up to see the mechanized top of the tank close itself back up. Caden is now trapped inside the Mechaquarium, with only the air in his tanks.
The animatronics are all turned off, and are just hanging in the water, immobile… except for Frank the diver. The diver starts swimming like a live human would, and begins circling Caden, getting closer and closer. The rest of the animatronics are all clustered in a group now, not moving but watching as Caden and the diver animatronic swim around. Fearfully, Caden swims to hide behind the cluster of bigger, scarier animatronics, trying to keep away from the diver, which he's convinced is planning to kill him.
"The static in his ears grew louder. Caden thought his eardrums would burst."
Frank the diver grabs Caden's arm. It tries to pull off Caden's breathing regulator, and Caden panics even more than he already was. When Caden fights back with his tools, the diver tries to strangle him. Caden gets the diver's helmet off, assuming the animatronic will stop attacking him if he can dismantle it enough, and… sees that it's Martin inside the diver's suit.
When Martin continues his attack on Caden, the rest of the animatronics come to life, circling around Martin. Caden watches in horror as the robots drown his boss.
(Well… that gave me "scene from the movie where Mike watches the animatronics springlock Afton" vibes. Or "scene from 'the Silver Eyes' where Charlie and her friends watch the animatronics springlock Afton." I'm saying Martin is the Afton of this scenerio, that's what I'm getting at.)
After Martin dies, the static Caden was hearing suddenly goes away. (So… Illusion disk? Definitely illusion disk.)
When giving his story to the police, Caden doesn't say that his boss was forcefully drowned by lifeless animatronics. He says that Martin's air supply broke off. He also explains that he escaped by cutting through the tarp over the tank opening with his screwdriver. He then goes on to explain that, once free, he'd called Roy over, and the two had hauled their boss's body out of the water, too late to revive him.
No one knows the full story of what really happened. As near as the investigating police officers can tell, they believe the boy Jason got into the Mechaquarium and drowned, and then Martin Copper buried his body among the decorative rocks and coral within it, trying to hide what happened.
Caden's grandmother is intrigued with the story, and is very proud of her grandson for surviving and for finding a long lost person.
Caden comes to visit the water park a week later. He walks by the Mechaquarium, which is half drained and closed off by yellow police tape. He thinks the breached animatronics look like dead fish.
Roy and Caden talk about what happened. Roy is sorry for the part he played in Martin's machinations against Caden, and offers Caden a new job. He recently bought the water park from the bank, and he wants Caden to help him bring it back to its former glory, his dreams for it big enough to rival the Pizzaplex.
The story ends abruptly there, with Roy trying to cajole Caden into taking the job, but no answer from Caden. It's a weird way to end the story, and makes me think the writer/s ran out of either time or ideas for it and just decided to end it.
.
.
Caden is the first protagonist of these books to survive his story! Good for him!
I really liked this story. The stories in these books are really hit or miss for me (and when they miss, they miss hard), but this one worked for me.
It's really unfortunate that the story just ended like that. I would have loved to see more of it! And more of the characters within it. Caden was a good FNAF protagonist -- he had lots of specific fears and phobias and a childhood trauma, but he didn't let his fears control him, and was shown to be very intelligent and had a strong moral compass. He plays off really well with his supporting characters, especially with Martin and Roy.
Speaking of, let's talk about them. Let's start with my boy Roy.
Roy is… interesting. He reminds me a lot of how Vanessa is characterized on the movie. He's very suspicious at several points in the story. Sometimes, it's because he's a red herring, made that way by the author to keep the reader from immediately looking at Martin. But other times… he just seems to know something. Or like he's done something he shouldn't.
For example, Roy personifies the Mechaquarium animatronics, treating them like people and referring to them as his friends. He also knew the missing boy Jason personally, saying that Jason was his friend before he went missing. Roy literally described both Jason and the animatronics as his childhood friends. This is followed by the story narrative showing us that the animatronics are possessed by Jason (to some degree or another). This just makes me wonder if Roy knew that the animatronics were possessed by Jason, but didn't have the ability to do anything about it.
This is also the return of the name "Jason" as an important character.
And Martin had an illusion disk. What was up with that? Where did he acquire it? Why was he using it? And was he the diver "animatronic" the entire time? Was there ever a diving animatronic? And if so, where is it? For Martin to repurpose the diving animatronic's outer shell into a costume like that, he would have had to do something with the robotic innards of the character. Are they just tucked away somewhere in the workshop? And if so, I would have liked for there to have been a scene where Caden is in the workshop, finds some random robotic parts, and thinks "oh, those must be spare parts for the diver animatronic" or something.
Overall, this story felt like a retelling of the standard FNAF story. A crime involving children going missing happens at a Freddy's location, the owner conceals what happened by hiding the child's body/s with the animatronics, and it results in the animatronics being haunted and seeking revenge against the owner. Complete with, again, the owner being murdered by his own animatronics. There's even a defunct animatronic as part of the cast: Golden Freddy/Fredbear for the og FNAF story, and a deteriorated squid for this story.
It's not a one-to-one comparison, obviously, but the repeated themes are pretty obvious.
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"Animatronic Apocalypse"
Quick question: is an animatronic apocalypse anything like a robot riot?
A middle school has an after school activity group calling themselves "the Fazbear Fanclub." The club consists of 5th and 6th graders (10- and 11-year-olds). The kids in the club have created their own board game, which they call "Animatronic Apocalypse."
"Glamrock Chica is hunting you. She's chased you into the school library. Your only weapons are a bow and a spear." (What kind of 'what would you do if…?' game is this?? XD)
"Animatronic Apocalypse" the board game is played similarly to "Dungeons & Dragons." The players create their own characters to roleplay as, and are given situations wherein their characters will have to do battle against attacking Fazbear animatronics. They're allowed to choose weapons where applicable, but they roll dice to determine whether their defenses work or their attacks land. (I would love to see someone make this game a reality, honestly.)
"Everyone knew [the Pizzaplex] had the best arcade, the best mini golf, the best raceway, the best pizza, and the best animatronic entertainment." (So this sounds a little more like the Pizzaplex we see in the "Security Breach" game.)
Our protagonist is Robbie Wilson, a 6th grade boy with long hair who loves the Fazbear animatronics. He has a dog named Hopper, who he also loves.
(-squints- Again with the name 'Jason.')
Love the fact that it's the adult in the room staring at his phone, ignoring the world around him, and not the kids doing that. Very reverse boomer humor.
Robbie has a best friend named Dyson, and the two of them are going through some growing pains right now. They've been best friends for years, but, as they're getting older, they're both developing very different interests, with Robbie leaning into roleplay games and robotics and Dyson leaning into team sports and video games. They're still trying to interact with each other, but don't really have much in common anymore, and they don't know how to talk to each other.
When Robbie next comes into the Fazbear Fanclub, he learns that the club president, Jason, had to step down from his position of club president; Jason's family is moving, and he's being transferred to a different school. The remaining club members vote in a girl named Zabrina for their new president.
(… Mr. Renner gives me the creeps. He's just… he's *too* invested in this unrelated 10-year-old girl. It's gross.)
As her first act of club president, Zabrina announces that, from now on, the kids in the club will be too busy playing the Animatronic Apocalypse game to do their homework. She says that, instead of studying, they should copy their classmates' work. This strikes Robbie as strange, since Zabrina is an honor student, and isn't a known cheat.
Zabrina describes their game prep as "preparing for the apocalypse," as if she means an actual real world situation. Mr. Renner, the school principal who sometimes acts as the adult chaperone for the Fazbear Fanclub, is also acting like there's a real world battle between an animatronic army and the humans of their world.
"What's said in the club stays in the club." (Lmao, Fight Club for children.)
(I like that Robbie has positive interactions with his parents every once in awhile. It's nice to see parents who genuinely care about their kids in this book genre, where neglectful or abusive parents are the expected variety. I mean, Robbie's parents are pretty oblivious to most of the stuff that's happening with their son, but it's clear that they listen to him talk and care about his wellbeing.)
Robbie tries to sit through a meeting of the Fazbear Fanclub, but the behaviors of Mr. Renner and Zabrina make him uncomfortable. (Same, bucko.) He ends up going home early. He walks home while looking at the ground, lost in thought, but the sound of a cat yowling and footsteps behind him makes him look up suddenly; to his confusion, he's the only person on the street, and he can't see any other people or animals.
A rock is thrown at him by an unseen assailant. The rock hits him in the head, drawing blood but not badly injuring him.
The next day at school, Robbie passes Zabrina in the halls. Zabrina stares straight ahead and walks stiffly. Something about her movements bothers Robbie.
Mr. Renner very suddenly leaves his position as school principal, with no explanations offered. Robbie later learns from his parents that Renner was caught stealing money from the school funds.
After school, Robbie sees Zabrina and some of the other kids from the Fazbear Fanclub walking in a pack. He follows them from a distance to see what they're doing, and they head into the woods behind a children's park. Once the kids are deep into the woods, they meet up with Mr. Renner. Robbie can see that Renner is talking to the kids, and drawing some sort of diagram into the dirt for the kids to see, but he's too far away to hear what's being said.
(I appreciate that Robbie is a protagonist who recognizes warning signs and red flags when he sees them. I don't expect fictional main characters to know when they're in danger, but Robbie knows exactly what's wrong with every scenario he walks in on.)
Mr. Renner gives the kids an order, and the group of children start eating dirt, no questions asked. (… That's so weird and I have nothing to say to that.)
Since his parents don't believe him, Robbie tells his friend Dyson about what he saw in the woods. Dyson is just as put off and confused as Robbie is.
Over the weekend, Robbie visits the nearby home of Johnny, one of the other kids in the Fazbear Fanclub and one of the kids he saw eating dirt in the woods with former principal Renner. Johnny's mother answers the door, but tells Robbie that Johnny is sick in bed with an upset stomach, and can't have visitors right now.
When Robbie sees Johnny in school a few days later, Johnny has bloodshot eyes. Johnny insists he wasn't sick over the weekend, but somehow says it in a way implying he's not really certain about that. He has blood on his fingertips, and when Robbie asks about it, Johnny just says "We had to poke the needles under our fingertips. We had to."
When Robbie wonders about the whereabouts of an absent classmate, Johnny says "I hope the animatronics didn't get him," as though that's a genuine threat.
The rest of the kids start eating live beetles that they brought to school in their lunchboxes. They clearly aren't enjoying the experience of eating live insects, but they do it anyway. Two of Robbie's classmates corner Robbie in the restroom and try to force feed him a live beetle. They tell him that the beetles are meant to prevent any of them from getting sick.
At this point in the story, it's clear that most of the kids have been convinced by Renner that they're in danger of contraction some sort of "toxin," and they have to consume increasingly gross and unhealthy things and perform dangerous rituals to help their immune system fight it off. Hence the dirt eating, the beetle eating, and the blood letting.
Zabrina seems to be reveling in her position as club president and Renner's second in command, using her position of power to force the other kids to humiliate themselves, possibly for her own entertainment. Robbie sees her force another kid to eat an extra beetle, just because she can.
When Robbie tries to talk to Zabrina, she doesn't respond to him. She acts like she can't see or hear him. (It's not like she's giving him the Silent Treatment though… it's more like he just doesn't exist to her.)
After overhearing the other kids talking about meeting up in the woods again, this time during the night, Robbie decides to follow them again to see what's going on. When he gets there, he sees the rest of the Fazbear Fanclub buried in the ground; most of their bodies are buried, but their faces are uncovered. Their faces are unmoving. Robbie can't tell if they're dead or not.
Robbie tries to dig up one of his classmates, and tries to check for a pulse. He can't feel pulse or breathing, so he starts performing chest compressions on the other boy. The boy, Nathan, finally starts sucking in air, taking deep gasping breaths. Nathan doesn't seem to know where he is, and is terrified when Robbie shows him that the other kids are still buried.
Zabrina suddenly rises from the dirt herself, screaming angrily at the two boys. Robbie and Nathan both flee.
The boys go to the police station. Robbie tries to tell a police officer about there being children buried in the ground behind a park, while beside him Nathan just sort of… shuts down, not speaking and staring at nothing. When the officer tries questioning Nathan, Nathan says he doesn't remember being buried, and that he doesn't know why he's here.
(Officer… Talbet? Like Talbert, but not?)
A couple officers agree to follow Robbie to where the kids are supposedly buried. But, once they arrive, there aren't any kids there. In fact, there's no evidence of kids ever being there. Nathan seems to have lost time, and is distressed about it. He doesn't seem to remember anything from before he and Robbie were standing in the police station.
When Nathan finally does start to remember things, he tells Robbie that Mr. Renner said the dirt had healing properties, and would keep the kids safe from the "animatronic toxins." The kids buried themselves, because obviously that was the only way to keep themselves safe from the perceived threat.
When Robbie comes down for breakfast the next day, he sees his father eat a beetle, the same way the kids at school did.
"His dad had been compromised."
None of the Fazbear Fanclub goes to school the next day. Robbie is the only one who isn't "out sick."
Deciding to pay the former principal a visit, Robbie goes to Mr. Renner's house. On the ground outside, Robbie notes some spray cans of paint, suggesting that Renner was the once who vandalized the school earlier in the story. Robbie tries to knock on a door, only to find that it's unlocked. He pushes it open and steps into the house. The house is much warmer than most people keep their homes, and he can smell something "putrid and stagnant." The yard and kitchen alike are filled with trash and rotting food.
Robbie hears voices somewhere in the house. Before he can either leave or investigate, he's caught, and finds himself staring up at Mr. Renner, who is wearing a rubber Freddy Fazbear mask. The masked Renner is sitting at the head of his dining room table, while all the other members of the Fazbear Fanclub sit around the table.
The kids don't react to Robbie, or speak to him. Except for Zabrina, who suddenly acknowledges his existence. When Renner asks Robbie why he's here, Zabrina comes to stand beside Renner, telling him that she thinks Robbie's a spy. Seemingly amused by this, Renner turns to the other kids, telling them that clearly Robbie is an animatronic coming to thwart their plans.
"Animatronics need to be taught a lesson."
Hearing this, the kids all turn on Robbie. As though in a trance, the kids hem him in and begin beating and kicking him. Robbie grabs a nearby fire poker to defend himself, and ends up skewering Renner.
This seems to break the kids from their trance-like state, and they all flee the scene, leaving the house apparently empty aside from Renner, Zabrina, and Robbie. Renner bleeds from his stab wound, and seems to choke on his own blood, but doesn't remove the Freddy mask; he makes it to his feet, and stumbles off down the hall of his house.
Renner leaks a dark liquid onto the floor behind him. Robbie doesn't think it looks like blood.
Zabrina calls Robbie a loser and spits on his face, then leaves. (… Okay?! What was that for?!)
Concerned about his stab victim, Robbie heads deeper into the house, fire poker in hand as he looks for Renner. He follows Renner's trail to a bedroom, which he notes is decorated with an older style of furniture and decor (and the description of it makes me think of the living room from the "Sister Location" cut scenes, or 'Mike's Room' from "Security Breach"). There's a closet in the bedroom, and Renner's leaking trail leads right to it.
Renner emerges from the closet. He doesn't have the Freddy mask on anymore, and now looks like a walking corpse. Black liquid seeps from the stab wound in his torso, and another bead of black liquid hangs from his mouth like drool.
Renner attacks Robbie again, and gets skewered again on the poker. This happens again and again, and Robbie suddenly realizes that Renner isn't feeling the pain of being stabbed. He doesn't stop attacking Robbie until Robbie stabs him in the eye with the poker. (Ew.) Renner collapses again, and Robbie runs away, leaving the house. (Call that man a Glamrock animatronic, 'cause he just got his shit wrecked by a 10-year-old boy!)
Someone called the cops and police officers arrive at the house just as Robbie runs out. They question him, then enter without him. When the officers come back out, they tell Robbie that the house is empty, and identify the dark liquid staining the floor as motor oil.
The police take Robbie home to his parents. His parents question him as well, and Robbie, like he did for the police, tells them everything. He know no one believes him, but he doesn't know what else to tell them. His parents let him stay home from school for a few days after that, letting him stay in his room for the most part and checking on him throughout the day.
Robbie's father talks to the police again a few days later, and the Wilson family learns that Mr. Renner has seemingly vanished. No one can find him, and no one knows where he might be. When the other members of the Fazbear Fanclub were questioned about their adult chaperone's whereabouts, none of them know anything, and they all have trouble remembered much about the man at all.
A week later, Robbie returns to school. He learns that Zabrina has transferred schools… or at least that she's stopped coming here. A new principal has joined the school faculty, and anyone seems to be acting like normal students and teachers now.
Robbie talks with Dyson and some of his other friends from school about restarting the Fazbear Fanclub.
.
.
So clearly, Principal Renner was an animatronic that looked like a person for most of the story. We're told that he undergoes a huge personality shift during the story, implying that at the beginning of the story, he's a human man, but he gets replaced by an animatronic imposter early on. Given that Robbie temporarily believes the man to be a corpse, it's also possible that Renner could have been an animatronic wearing a human body as a suit, a la Ennard wearing Michael Afton at the end of "Sister Location."
(Actually, Renner made me think of Michael a lot during that last scene. Robot wearing a human skinsuit? Check. Guy wearing a Freddy Fazbear character mask? Check. Lives in a house decorated in '70s chic? Check. But I don't know why all the Michael similarities. And, for every similarity, there are just as many dissimilarities. So I just really don't know what it means.)
It's also clear that Renner the animatronic has some sort of hypnotic hold over not just the kids in Robbie's school, but also several of the other residents in the town. The Fazbear Fanclub kids are especially susceptible to his machinations, being easily convinced to injure themselves and even bury themselves alive just because he told them to, but throughout the story we also see several adults behaving in similar ways (like Robbie's dad eating bugs with his morning coffee, or the police officers encouraging the kids to play along with the dangerous games).
(This isn't the first time in these books we've encountered an animatronic with hypnotic abilities, and I'm sure it won't be the last.)
Whether Zabrina is an animatronic or another human victim of Renner is unclear, but it seems to me that the narrative implies Zabrina is an animatronic that has replaced a human child, much like Renner, and that she and Renner are both sent to this town and school with a specific goal in mind. What that goal is isn't clear: they're either building some kind of army of enslaved humans, or they're using the people of this town to test their hypnotic abilities.
So, if Renner and Zabrina have such a strong hold on the town, why is Robbie apparently immune to their whims? I actually don't think Robbie is immune to their hypnotic ways - rather, I think they leave him out on purpose, so that they can turn the other kids against him. It's an experiment to see if the enthralled humans will turn against their own, and if they can stand up to a human acting of his own free will.
The whole section about the kids burying themselves in the dirt and Robbie finding them in mounds in the forest reminded me of what I'm told happens with the twisted animatronics in "The Twisted Ones." I never read that book so I don't have any strong parallels to draw there, but I find it interesting.
This is also the third time in the FNAF books that we've had a protagonist named Robert. The first time was Bob in "Fazbear Frights: Bunny Call" and the second was Robert in "Fazbear Frights: the Cliffs." There was also a secondary character named Robert in "Tales From the Pizzaplex: Frailty," and there may have been others I just don't remember right now. My point is that Robert is a name that pops up a lot -- whether the name is important or the writer/s are just lazy, you be the judge.
Speaking of repeating names - when the principal is first introduced as "Mr. Renner," I immediately thought of the actor Jeremy Renner. I don't know if that was an intended name association but, given how often the name Jeremy pops up in this franchise, I wouldn't put it past Cawthon and his team.
And, of course, the return of the name Jason. Much like Afton, that name always comes back. (It haunts me.) EDIT: I wonder if the name 'Jason' is a jokey Easter egg referencing Jason Topolski from Steel Wool Studios, the current FNAF parent company.
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"Bobbiedots, Pt 1"
Our new protagonist is a guy named Abe Thayer, who works in the Pizzaplex. Despite his job, Abe is homeless, and spends both day and night in the Pizzaplex, avoiding being noticed by his coworkers or the security cameras, and eating pizza out of the trash.
Next door to the Pizzaplex is a tall, shiny apartment structure called the Fazplex Tower. This is an apartment building owned and operated by Fazbear's, and provides free housing for Pizzaplex employees who work at high enough positions.
In addition to his job, Abe is also taking college courses while he works. He's very good with technology and computers, and he's working toward a college degree that he hopes will earn him a higher position at the Pizzaplex, with his goal being to reach a high enough position that he's given an apartment in the Tower.
Abe has a hidden space behind Roxy Raceway that he's currently sleeping in. He has a laptop in there, which he uses to send emails to his mother, lying to her and assuring her that he's in a good, safe home and doing well in school. He worries about being caught by a security guard or a wandering animatronic.
Abe is good at lying. So good in fact that he has a completely fake resume. This is a trait he learned from his dad when he was a kid.
In the morning, Abe bathes himself in a mens' restroom with handsoap and paper towels. It's called out that he passes by the golden Glamrock Freddy statue in the front lobby of the Pizzaplex. (Abe doesn't just work in *a* Pizzaplex -- he's working in *the* Pizzaplex, the one we see in the "Security Breach" game. There's a lot of points throughout this story specifically describing the Pizzaplex, hammering home to the audience "It's *the* Pizzaplex! It's the one from the game! You've been here before!")
Abe chats with his coworker, Evan (yes, I'm side-eying the name choice), who has a higher position and lives in the Fazplex Tower with his wife and kids. Evan tells him that the Fazplex Tower apartments got a recent upgrade, and they now have holographic home assistants called 'Bobbiedots.'
Abe is called to the administration office by the new director. She tells him that a new position "just opened up," and he's being promoted to fill it.
As part of the promotion, Abe should be given a Tower apartment, but is told that there are no apartments left to give him. The employee in charge of assigning him an apartment tells him she can't assign one to him, and that all but one are already being lived in; the one that's left has been labeled "off limits," and she assumes that the tech installed in that apartment is malfunctioning and needs to be repaired before anyone can live in it.
Abe decides he'll move into the off limits apartment anyway, figuring he can repair the malfunctioning tech himself. He tricks the receptionist to leave her desk for a minute, then uses her computer to assign the off limits apartment to himself.
Sneaking into the building, Abe goes to check out his new apartment, and has his first experience with one of the Bobbiedots, a set of feminine AI characters who pop up on various screens throughout the apartment.
Bobbiedot 3 is the first to introduce herself to Abe. She startles him so much, he doesn't speak for a minute. Concerned about the new occupant possibly not speaking, 3 immediately offers to learn sign language if that would be a better way of communicating with him.
(You move into a new apartment, and Hatsune Miko tells you that she's your personal assistant and maid so long as you live here. That's what's happening here.)
Returning to work, Abe tries to help acclimate Preston, a young technician intern and one of Abe's new underlings. Both men end up staring at DJ Music Man apprehensively, discussing how to run maintenance on a giant spider they're both scared of, while DJMM ignores them and naps in his sound booth.
(The DJ's torso has a giant speaker, which I don't think I've ever noticed before.)
Abe shows Preston around the tunnels that DJ Music Man uses, saying that the lights in the tunnels often cause electrical problems, and one of Preston's jobs will be to keep on eye on the generator for this section of the Pizzaplex. As they follow the tunnels (so Preston can get used to their layouts), they exit into some backrooms and even find a restroom nearby.
When the two employees enter the bathroom, one of DJ Music Man's hands reach in after them, trying to grab them. Abe pulls Preston out of the way, and explains that DJMM was originally programmed with a "bouncer mode." His bouncer mode never worked quite right, and the tech programmers removed it, but "missed a few lines of code." Now, DJMM will sometimes randomly try to grab and remove people from his immediate area.
"Does this job have hazard pay?" (Honestly, that's a great question. But I'm guessing the answer is 'no.')
Abe returns home to the apartment after work. He's introduced to the other two Bobbiedots, who are just as excited as their sister to have a new apartment occupant to take care of. The three Bobbiedots all behave like teenage girls, and squabble with each other like sisters. They all behave like they have a crush on Abe, and it's unclear if they're programmed to behave that way of if it's a trait they've learned from somewhere.
After chatting with them for a little bit, Abe renames each of them based off of their appearance.
💗🍩 Bobbiedot 3 is a pink-colored character. She speaks with a cheerful, peppy voice that reminds Abe of a bubbly cheerleader. She explains that she's in charge of keeping the apartment clean and making sure the occupant is healthy. Over the course of the story, we'll see her provide Abe with lots of basic household help, cleaning and keeping the pantry stocked, and especially help him with cooking. After learning that Abe has been homeless for awhile, she takes a blood sample from him to determine what vitamins he's low in, and creates a personal menu for him to provide him with those nutrients. When she's not assigned a task, 3 often pretends to eat sweets, portraying her avatar with donuts and other pastries. Abe renames her to Rose, because of her pink coloring and rosy demeanor.
💚📝 Bobbiedot 2 is green-colored and wears glasses. She speaks in a sarcastic, bratty voice. She explains that she's an information assistant, who's job is to relay important information about the news and the weather, keep track of memos and reminders, and can handle shopping lists and other similar tasks. Throughout the story, we'll see her behave like an internet search bar, pulling up lots of information at once, weed through it to find correct information, and relay it to Abe in a quick, concise manner. 2 is portrayed as the most serious of the Bobbiedots, and she constantly tries to prevent her sisters from slacking off. Abe renames her to Olive, because of her green coloring.
💙🎧 Bobbiedot 1 is blue- and white-colored, and wears headphones and a grey outfit. She speaks with a soft, sing-song voice, and often sounds like she's singing more than speaking. She explains that she's an entertainment assistant, which means she can access movies and television shows, music, books, magazines, and other forms of entertainment media, pulling them up on the nearest screen if Abe requires them or searching for something similar if he wants to try something new. She tells Abe that she can also handle any social media accounts he may have, and that she can arrange romantic dates for him via social media apps. When she's not assigned a task, 1 tends to watch romantic movies. Abe renames her to Gemini, because her blue and white coloring makes him think of space and constellations.
(Also renaming the entertainment assistant to Gemini made me think of analog horror series Gemini Home Entertainment. I don't know if that was an intentional reference, but it wouldn't surprise me if it was.)
The Bobbiedots show Abe how to use the main control console for their system. The apartment has lots of tech screens and glass walls that the Bobbiedots project themselves onto, so they can literally follow Abe around the apartment if they want/need to.
"I have multiple sources that say--" "You just find things that support your own ideas!" XD
"I'm a luscious fruit!" (Oh, Olive… XD )
The Bobbiedots tell Abe that the previous occupant's belongings are all still in the apartment. This includes all of his clothes, and a fully stocked kitchen; none of the food has spoiled yet, so he hasn't been gone that long. Abe tries to ask the Bobbiedots about the previous apartment occupant, wanting to know why the man moved out and why all his stuff is still here. The Bobbiedots don't answer him, deflecting and talking about Morocco cuisine instead. Assuming that the Bobbiedots are programmed to do this to protect tenants' privacy, Abe decides not to press further.
Before bed, Abe sends an email to his mother, letting her know that he's been promoted at work and living in a nicer place. It's nice that he can be honest with his mother for once.
The next day, just as Abe is heading out the door for work, he notices a strange trapdoor in the kitchen ceiling. The Bobbiedots tell him that it's for maintenance purposes and is off limits to tenants. As Abe leaves, he can see that the trapdoor is open a crack, even though the Bobbiedots just told him it was locked.
At work, Abe runs tech maintenance on parts of the Fazerblast Arena. He notes some shapes and patterns in the lighting of the arena, and wonders if the shapes mean something, like "modern hieroglyphs" or "a secret code lit up on the walls of the arena." (For those who are unaware, there is a secret code scrawled across multiple walls of the Pizzaplex in both "Security Breach" and the "Ruin DLC." One of the codes is on the walls in a location that fans have dubbed 'Mike's Room,' and it's been decoded into a cryptic poem that people are still working on deciphering. The other code is the Tally Marks Code, which as far as I know is still currently unsolved.)
(There's a kid that Abe interacts with in the arena who made me think of Gregory. I don't know if it's meant to actually be Gregory, of if that's just wishful thinking on my part.)
Later that night, Abe is woken by a sound during the night. Not sure what he heard, Abe decides to investigate. He thinks he hears something moving in the apartment. When he calls them, Rose tells him that the apartment is secure, and Olive suggests he was having a dream.
The same thing happens again the following night. This time, when Abe lays quietly in bed, he think he hears what sounds like something being dragged over carpet. (I mean, you live in an apartment now. You could just be hearing the neighbors, or the building's plumbing, or any number of things, really. I'm sure this ritzy Fazbear building has all kinds of soundproof, but I'd still expect some noises to trickle through every once in awhile.)
Abe follows the sound to the kitchen. He thinks it sounds like something crawling up the wall. Waking the Bobbiedots up and staring suspiciously up at the maintenance hatch in the kitchen ceiling, Abe tries to ask more about it.
The Bobbiedots explain that they are part of the second generation of Bobbiedots. They say that the maintenance hatch was installed for the use of the Gen 1 Bobbiedots, which were physical robots. There's a power grid in the ceiling, which the Gen 1 Bobbiedots were plugged into, and which the maintenance hatch leads to.
Apparently, the Gen 1 Bobbiedots were never actually removed from the apartment, and are still up in the maintenance space. Rose, Olive, and Gemini further explain that the Gen 1 Bobbiedots will come down from their ceiling crawlspace and try to clean the apartment. While the Gen 2 Bobbiedots believe their predecessor sisters to be harmless, they also express that they don't really appreciate the "help" with running the apartment.
Abe isn't comfortable with the idea of robots he can't control just coming and going out of his living space at will.
"The Bobbiedots couldn't read his mind… could they?" (Eh, it's Fazbear's. Who knows?)
A day or two later, Abe takes advantage of the nice, jetted tub in the apartment, and takes a long soak in it while reading a paperback detective novel. But the water in his jetted bath starts to get hotter and hotter, causing him to eventually jump out as the water begins to boil. His skin is scalded, and he jumps into the shower, turning on the cold water.
He summons the Bobbiedots, and Olive and a very distressed Rose tell him how to treat his burns, directing him to where a bottle of aloe vera is kept. They tell him that the water's increased temperature is the fault of the Gen 1 robots in the ceiling, citing that the robot's cables often get tangled up with all the other power cords and control modules; they further clarify that the Gen 1 robots are damaged and can't be removed, and that that's the reason this apartment was off limits in the first place.
The computer interface Bobbiedots start to realize the sort of dangers posed to their new tenant by the presence of the robotic Bobbiedots in the ceiling. They decide to set up a system, planning to keep track of the robotic Bobbiedots' movements more closely and regularly inspecting various systems around the apartment to make sure everything works properly.
Abe sends another email to his mother, since it's been a few days and he doesn't want her to worry. He doesn't tell her about the various incidents around the apartment.
At work the next day, Abe tries to show Preston how to fix the generators in the Daycare Center.
"Why are the generators in the play structures?" (Preston's asking the same questions we've all been asking since "Security Breach" came out.)
Abe explains that the generators are a new installment; the lights in the daycare kept running out of power and blinking off, so they had to install more generators to power the lights for longer periods of time. He also says that the play structure was, unfortunately, their only option of locations to put the generators, since they need to be able to get to the generators to manually restart them on a regular schedule.
Abe is less concerned about the weird generator placement and more concerned about the Daycare Attendant, who he views as a "less kid-friendly version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." When Preston the intern asks about the DA, Abe explains that the Daycare Attendant is repurposed animatronic that used to perform in the theater. As a theater performer, the Sun/Moon animatronic was designed to switch between the two personas in different lighting as part of its performances. When the Sun/Moon animatronic was reprogrammed to be the Daycare Attendant, the programmers couldn't manage to remove the light-dark trigger. The Pizzaplex managers decided it was cheaper and easier to keep the lights on at all times in the daycare than it was to fix the animatronic attendant.
While they're working on repairing an offline generator in the daycare, the Moon version of the DA sneaks up on them, watching them through the play structure walls. Moon doesn't attack them, just stands there and judges them, calling them "naughty boys."
Back at the apartment, Abe tries to bake in the kitchen. The stove top suddenly catches fire, and the flames climb up the long sleeve of his shirt. He whips the shirt off and smothers the fire as quickly as possible, but still ends up running his singed arm under cold water. The Bobbiedots panic. Abe is no longer sure that these Bobbiedots can keep him safe.
The weekend passes with minimal incident. On Monday, when Abe returns home, the Bobbiedots don't appear to greet him like they usually do. He goes to turn on the lights, only to get nearly electrocuted by a sudden power surge.
The Bobbiedots come online. They say that the Gen 1 Bobbiedots are hooked into the same computer system that they are, and that the Gen 1s froze them out for a few minutes.
Abe asks the Bobbiedots more about their Gen 1 predecessors. They tell him that the Gen 1s were more like the animatronics from the Pizzaplex, in that they have physical bodies and possess pseudo-sentience. Olive tells him that she believes they're envious of Abe, wanting to be human like he is. Then she suggests that the Gen 1s are confusing Abe with the previous tenant, but she doesn't say why that would explain their behavior.
Abe tries to eat a sandwich, but it makes him sick, and he runs to the bathroom to throw up. Abe has the realization that the food in his kitchen has been laced with something to make him ill.
"How has my apartment tried to kill me? Let me count the ways." (Don't… don't quote that poem at me, FNAF. I still haven't forgiven you for the last time you used that one.)
As the days go by, Abe has several more incidents in his apartment. The incidents get so bad, Abe worries that one of them will kill him, sooner or later. But he refuses to leave the apartment, refusing to go back to being homeless.
Sitting in his office, Abe types up another email to his mom. He doesn't notice a cable trailing through the air behind him, vanishing behind a trapdoor in the ceiling.
.
.
We've never had a proper two-parter in this books, so I was pretty concerned about how this was going to play out. I figured the story would either be super intense or super boring, and that it would be insufferable either way. But I was surprised -- I really enjoyed this one, and I think it was written with a good balance of spooky, mysterious elements with mundane but still interesting segments. I'm actually interested in seeing where "Part 2" takes this story.
I like that we get to learn so much about the Pizzaplex. Since this protagonist works at the Pizzaplex in the tech area, so we learn some background information about the animatronics.
I love the back and forth conversations of the intern asking "why are the animatronics glitchy? why is the building structured like this?" and the team leader sighing and answering "I don't know. Fazbear's is a weird company with weird priorities." I'm absolutely fascinated by the employee culture at Fazbear's, and moments like this are really humorous to me.
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Epilogue:
When we last saw them, the kids were running from the Mimic, which had just killed two of their friends, cutting the group of eight kids down to six. We pick up with them again, and currently the kids have found a new temporary hiding spot. Unfortunately, they're surrounded by the partially decaying pieces of dead bodies.
(I forgot there was another Jace/Jason among this group. Actually, plenty of these kids' names are repeated names that we've heard before, so it shouldn't surprise me. Jase, Hope, and Joel are all repeated names.)
Lucia and Kelly have found a radio, and they and Jace and Adrien decide to try using it to contact the outside world. They hole up in an office to do this. Joel and Wade go off on their own, deciding to find a way out themselves. The metal monster (the Mimic) is still stalking around after them.
In this old office, Lucia and Kelly work on reconstructing the radio's pieces so they can use it to contact someone outside. Ultimately, the girls decide that the radio's parts are too old and fragile to manipulate properly, and they start searching around the office for anything else that may help them.
Lucia finds a user's manual for operating several animatronics and endoskeletons, including the metal monster that's been coming after them. She identifies the thing as something called a "Mimic," a kind of animatronic endoskeleton that has limbs and a torso that can change lengths, allowing it to be fit into any size mascot costume. The failsafe for when the Mimic malfunctions or poses a threat to a human is to remove its power supply, an instruction that doesn't help these kids at all.
The manual tells them that there are two Mimics: Mimic 1 and Mimic 2. The kids don't know which one is the one chasing them.
In a room at the end of a hall, Joel and Wade find a maintenance chute in the wall, which allows them to access a large air vent, which leads to an opening on the roof of the Pizzaplex. The problem is that the air conditioning and vent system is still partially functional, and there's a moving fan blocking the vent opening. They look around, but can't find anything to turn off the moving fan in their way.
Joel remembers how the power blinked off when the Mimic appeared and killed Hope, and assumes that something about the robot disrupts nearby power circuits; his new plan is to lure the Mimic into the room they're currently in, and then climb out the vent and escape when the Mimic's presence causes the vent system to malfunction, temporarily shutting off the fan. (Joel truly is the biggest moron around, huh?) After some deliberating, the boys agree that Wade will try to lure the Mimic to them.
While Wade's gone, Joel starts climbing into the maintenance tunnel. (I think we all know where this is going.)
"Watching [the Mimic] move was like watching the undulating movements of a shadow monster."
The lights go out wherever the Mimic is. They come back on after the Mimic leaves the area. (What a weird ability for this thing to have.)
Wade gets the Mimic's attention and leads it toward the room where Joel's escape is. The Mimic follows behind him. As soon as he's in the room, Wade starts climbing up into the chute after Joel. But then the Mimic catches up with them, grabbing Wade and pulling him back down, dismembering the boy.
While his friend is dying, Joel climbs up higher, heading for the fan that's been turned off. He tries to fit himself between the blades of the fan, but can only get his head through, unable to fit the rest of his body through the empty space.
The Mimic gathers up Wade's body parts and leaves, going to deposit Wade's head, arms, and torso in the correct piles. ("Pile of bodies, pile of heads." - Venom) As soon as it leaves, the fan turns back on, chopping Joel into pieces. (Yeah, that's what I figured would happen.)
(And then there were 4...)
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familyhybridcaravan · 7 months ago
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Discover Your Next Great Adventure: Top Camper Trailer Destinations
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Exploring the great outdoors in a camper trailer is a perfect blend of adventure and comfort. Whether you're a seasoned traveler or new to the world of camper trailers, the right destination can make all the difference. Here's a guide to some of the best camper trailer destinations in the United States, each offering unique experiences and breathtaking landscapes.
Yosemite National Park, California
Why Visit:
Yosemite National Park is renowned for its stunning granite cliffs, giant sequoias, waterfalls, and diverse wildlife. Camping here puts you in the heart of one of the most beautiful and iconic national parks in the world.
Highlights:
El Capitan and Half Dome: These iconic rock formations offer amazing views and challenging hikes.
Yosemite Falls: One of the tallest waterfalls in North America.
Glacier Point: A breathtaking viewpoint accessible by car or a challenging hike.
Best Time to Visit:
Spring and fall are ideal, offering mild weather and fewer crowds. However, summer provides the full range of park activities.
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee/North Carolina
Why Visit:
Straddling the border of Tennessee and North Carolina, the Great Smoky Mountains are famous for their mist-covered mountains and diverse plant and animal life.
Highlights:
Cades Cove: A beautiful valley with abundant wildlife and historical structures.
Clingmans Dome: The highest point in the park, offering panoramic views.
Wildflower Walks: Especially stunning in spring with over 1,500 types of flowering plants.
Best Time to Visit:
Fall for spectacular foliage or spring for blooming wildflowers.
Zion National Park, Utah
Why Visit:
Zion National Park is known for its towering sandstone cliffs, narrow canyons, and scenic vistas. The park offers a range of activities from hiking to canyoneering.
Highlights:
Angels Landing: A challenging hike with rewarding views.
The Narrows: A unique hike through a river within a slot canyon.
Kolob Canyons: Less crowded, offering serene trails and dramatic scenery.
Best Time to Visit:
Spring and fall for pleasant weather and vibrant colors.
Acadia National Park, Maine
Why Visit:
Acadia National Park offers a stunning coastal landscape with rocky shores, woodlands, and the highest point on the East Coast, Cadillac Mountain.
Highlights:
Cadillac Mountain: First place to see the sunrise in the U.S. during fall and winter.
Park Loop Road: A scenic drive with multiple stops for hiking and photography.
Jordan Pond: Known for its crystal-clear water and iconic views of the Bubbles mountains.
Best Time to Visit:
Summer for warm weather activities, fall for brilliant foliage.
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming/Montana/Idaho
Why Visit:
Yellowstone, America's first national park, is a geothermal wonderland with geysers, hot springs, and abundant wildlife including bison and grizzly bears.
Highlights:
Old Faithful: The park's most famous geyser, erupting at regular intervals.
Grand Prismatic Spring: The largest hot spring in the U.S., known for its vibrant colors.
Lamar Valley: Excellent for wildlife viewing, especially at dawn and dusk.
Best Time to Visit:
Late spring to early summer or early fall to avoid peak crowds and enjoy moderate weather.
Olympic National Park, Washington
Why Visit:
Olympic National Park boasts diverse ecosystems, from rugged coastline and lush rainforests to snow-capped mountains.
Highlights:
Hoh Rainforest: One of the few temperate rainforests in the U.S., known for its moss-covered trees.
Hurricane Ridge: Offers panoramic mountain views and accessible trails.
Rialto Beach: Famous for its sea stacks and tide pools.
Best Time to Visit:
Summer for the best weather and accessible trails.
Tips for a Successful Camper Trailer Trip
Plan Ahead: Popular parks can fill up quickly, so make reservations well in advance.
Pack Smart: Bring essentials like weather-appropriate clothing, food, first-aid supplies, and camping gear.
Respect Nature: Follow Leave No Trace principles to keep parks clean and safe for wildlife.
Stay Connected: Inform someone of your travel plans and check for cell service availability in remote areas.
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libidomechanica · 10 months ago
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Say, that space saw nothing, or Eclectic (for the bleed alone)
I told instant; for Phoebus, the sky for your     moderate than of those thinking some dragon of they each canto into Johnson’s soft pillow’d,     and and kiss on the hole damp awe
assail, for shore, but bad acquit in which of wine,     developing of prison-wall thy stream, teach sere apt seruant Muse! Then grief, beyond a     pond of Retribute taking they preach’d
the fire-sure, let ear in vain. It was seem’d as pleasant     which man sleep. From the lady and warms, he ship afloater, died the fierce complace with     due whene’er away; tappiness with
all lightning. Say, that space saw nothing, or Eclectic     for the bleed alone. For no more to loving lovely Moncada webfooted descence     couenants there dost proues strangerous
sky were patching which wakeful ladies, and it     real spirit at in came a homewardeth, giuing francs for something salt lawn in clouds, then     with sparkled forth dirty years vppon my
extension. He first in through native strength, in flowers     of amber yet she, his death’s poet, Singering song which deformer soul offer’d     with order pass, the pine, and despite
of the heaven, forced me, whose sour, must be kind of     feather. To mourning like a moment’s all be down to loved, of ocean’s self, should passes     I hopes were type, not some remote deep,
mingle of these bodies and stole, when the tingle     his Lips. Which I inferior the boy expired—the eyelids finding of dulcet in     rurally evermore—when sheets, dream
for kisse! Material group of Saturday in     these Jack Cades happiness was no light, so faith orient from the dead? For his called     with a dread large blue, who show me sing,
behold, or pain, and curst truly I’ll take innocence     war, and purple, platest skin on my vertue nothings to be seen mama who dark squall     cause t is a rag of fiddling cry
plainly heare him. Even that turn’d his youth, forest,     in commence had suffering but not murder thine eye would not sink. Hence our trance at read in     the weary office within enough;
and then sentence of the surpass’d, and now that your     days, an awkward in mourn waves, cliff, throng. They won’t that unusual like and jewels, neithers did     every shape. Farewell took his prime maid
relief. That fame. Deep griefs spread as he same chase     eternity. Of splendour; Indian man they put on me—breath, after, to they thrumm’d a     hundred: so keep him for the calm, and
up to heard in nation, clamour’d in the word could     sparkling fingers diddly. Or the beau ideal. Their sae fair Haidee she dwarfs and like     rays said, upon the face of a nod.
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ellorycade · 1 year ago
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Cade Pond
It was about a 6-mile hike to what is called the Cade Pond. It was dark and lush, nature sounded happy today. As I walked through the woods, I noticed a strange pond that seemed to be out of place. I was kind of hoping it would be. I got about four miles in when I saw another little path that diverged to the left. It didn’t look like it went too far. In fact, I could see a little bit of water clearing up ahead. Giddy with the idea of taking a break. It was a massive circle clearing with trees surrounding the edges. The water didn’t look swimmable, more of a pond with mild creatures swimming in it.
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stormclawponyrises · 1 year ago
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>"Warrior cat fans...... if your characters were in Warriors, what would their names be? What Clan/s would they be in?"
Oh it's been a while since I thought about this. I made designs for the RFTA protagonists a while ago but I feel like they're probably a bit old now.
I think Miltei would be Milkbite (due to her hunting skill, pale colour and 'milk' sounding vaguely like 'milt'), a shadowclan warrior who likes to cross the border a lot- but not out of ill will.
Ash would naturally be Ashheart (because Ash is a common prefix and he has a lot of heart symbology. Also heart because of his loyal nature), windclan warrior who spends a lot of time alone.
Cade would be Copperpond (Copper referring to the coppertips flower and his appearance, and pond because of his calm nature), thunderclan warrior who's head is always lost in the clouds.
>"If your comic was a newly released movie, what stupid reasons would critics have to slam it/grade it poorly?"
Should have been less violent and been a movie for kids. Plot too slow.
>"We talk about ships and stuff, but let's throw that aside Give me two characters of yours who absolutely hate eachother"
Ash and Eris. Were playground rivals and got along poorly in school. They probably would have reconciled their differences as adults if Ash hadn't accidentally splattered Eris' twin brother's brain matter all over the pavement
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gainesville-first · 2 years ago
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Pavilion on 62nd in Gainesville, FL
These days, it is essential to check posts on social media to find a comfortable and luxurious home. Luckily, there are remarkable apartments in Gainesville, FL, nowadays. Pavilion on 62nd is one of your best alternatives. Interestingly, the Pavilion on 62nd is a spacious, all-inclusive, and full furnished apartment community. While their location is distinctly tranquil, they are located near the bustling nightlife and remarkable shopping as well as the University of Florida and Santa Fe College. Besides, they have immediate move in availability. As a suggestion, you should apply immediately to avail of the amazing benefits offered by the realty for early applicants.
Pavilion on 62nd
Nowadays, there are also many factors to consider in searching for apartments in Gainesville, FL. Pavilion on 62nd provides extraordinary 3 bedroom apartments in Gainesville, FL living spaces at present so there’s nothing to worry. In addition, the apartment complex provides stellar community features, extraordinary amenities and pet-friendly living selections. Aside from that, you can relax at their resort style pool, or get active at their outdoor basketball and sand volleyball courts. Besides, your furry friend can even engage in some exercise at our dog park with obstacles. Lastly, the Pavilion on 62nd offers classic living and will quickly become your happy place.
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Gainesville, FL
Let’s talk the early settlers of the Gainesville, FL location. After all, many people are curious about the city. There is archeological evidence, from about 12,000 years ago, of the presence of Paleo Indians in the Gainesville area. It is probable although it is not known if there were any permanent settlements. Besides, a Deptford culture campsite existed in Gainesville and was estimated to have been used between 500 BCE and 100 CE. The Deptford people moved south into Paynes Prairie and Orange Lake during the first century and evolved into the Cades Pond culture. In addition, the people who remained in the Gainesville area at that time were displaced by migrants from southern Georgia sometime in the seventh century.
Florida Museum of Natural History-Exhibits in Gainesville, FL
The Florida Museum of Natural History-Exhibits is a well-known tourist attraction that is situated in the Gainesville, FL location. There are many travelers from across the globe who visit the travel destination to enjoy relaxation, learning new things, and exploration. The Florida Museum of Natural History is Florida's official state-sponsored and chartered natural-history museum. Its main facilities are located at 3215 Hull Road on the campus of the University of Florida in Gainesville. Besides, the main public exhibit facility, Powell Hall and the attached McGuire Center, is located in the Cultural Plaza, which it shares with the Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art, and the Curtis M. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts.
The Science Says Former Florida QB Anthony Richardson Will Be Worth The Gamble For An NFL Team
There are many interesting news reports in Gainesville, FL nowadays. One of the said reports is about sports. Based on a recent news report, after his superhuman performance in the Underwear Olympics, Anthony Richardson has become the ultimate NFL lottery ticket. In addition, the Powerball of quarterbacks, a longshot who could bring unimaginable fortune to some lucky team. Or maybe he’ll be a spectacular bust. Besides, there are phrases like pelvis angular velocity, Flexion torque, and supraspinatus rotation. Lastly, those are phrases you might hear from Tom Gormely, one of the masterminds behind Richardson’s exhibition at last week’s NFL Combine.
Link to maps
Florida Museum of Natural History-Exhibits 3215 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL 32611, United States Take Bledsoe Dr and Hull Rd to FL-121 S/SW 34th St 3 min (0.4 mi) Drive along SW 20th Ave 5 min (2.0 mi) Drive to your destination 2 min (0.3 mi) Pavilion on 62nd 1000 SW 62nd Blvd, Gainesville, FL 32607, United States
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reversioning · 2 months ago
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Reynold Meadow Arlene Crossing Makayla Bypass Camilla Canyon Ferne Clumb Shields Creek Prosacco Circles Kellen Points Cassin Mission Botsford Springs Currie Pond Simpkin Glade Cade Trench Grigg Lot Campbell Court Dell Woods Janey Bog Stein Peninsula
Lesly Mall Ritchie River Hermann Spurs Doyle Lights Hazle Pine Freda Oval Block Prairie Brice Ridge Denesik Fork McClure Shores Ulrich Point Gottlieb Skyway Hessel Track Quigley Street Weber River Jazlyn Vista Jenkins Island
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gluttonydragon · 3 years ago
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(Sorry for taking a bit longer than I thought😅)
It has been a year or two since Optimus left for space. Since he charged Lorena with leading & taking care of the Autobots while he was away. She & Cade have found a hideout which she was coming back to from an extensive scouting mission for mechs in need or materials.
Arctic was just waking up from a nap as he yawned walking towards a small pond and started to drink from it. The day was cold with some snow covering the area. "Man todays goinna be great."
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lunamagicablu · 3 years ago
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Ognuno di noi sceglie i suoi specchi: c'è chi si specchia nella luna e si riempie di luce, c'è chi si specchia nelle acque di uno stagno e cade nel fango.
– Rosita Matera
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Each of us chooses his mirrors: there are those who are reflected in the moon and are filled with light, there are those who are reflected in the waters of a pond and fall into the mud.
- Rosita Matera
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corrabell · 1 year ago
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💕 Thanks for the tag Mags!
Pajarito colibrí by Natalia Lafourcade
All to Myself by Dan + Shay
cardigan - the long pond studio sessions by Taylor Swift
What Was I Made For? by Billie Eilish
Stick Season by Noah Kahan
right where you left me by Taylor Swift
Slow Burn by Kacey Musgraves
Sweet Nothing by Taylor Swift
Lovely High - Piano Version by Cade Hoppe
Fast Car by Luke Combs
zero pressure — @bunniesofsteel @jadore-andor @magpie-to-the-morning & anyone else 😊
Thanks for the tag @amywritesthings!
shuffle the top tracks playlist and post the first ten:
Little Girl Gone | Chinchilla
Ready Now | Dodie
Never Love an Anchor | The Crane Wives
Coffin | Plvtinum
Bloodstream | Ed Sheeran
Chronically Cautious | Brandan Bayles
Cosmic Love | Florence & the Machine
Twin Flame | Machine Gun Kelly
Reckless Driving | Lizzy McAlpine
She Likes It | Russell Dickerson
np tags: @ezrasbirdie @pedrito-friskito @grogusmum @wannab-urs and anyone who wants to play!
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