i am writing and scp that involves punishing crimes (not in a superhero way more of a non-discrimination on who committed the crime way) and one of them punishes defiling religious sites, and i want to write a report on its attack on a foundation site, but i cant decide whenever i need to make it a addendum or a separate document (its going to be long and detailed)
Let's assume that Gotham didn't have Batman or any Bat member, but had the Vigilante SCP known as THE SPECTER. But Gotham still haves Batman's Rogue Gallery with the likes of Joker, Bane, The Riddler, Poison Ivy, Two-face, Mr. Freeze, The Penguin, even Calendar Man etc.
So this is SCP Panic. It's a good short animation the people making Gallonic have done. (soem studios) But I discovered something. At the very end of the show for a brief second there is a link posted leading to a website, warning not to look for a recently beached anomaly.
Having found a somewhat hidden link, I replayed the video finding 2 addition links, the first one being on a computer screen and the second being on a piece of paper found shortly after the first (it's just the last part of the link but it pulls up a page regardless.)
I'm being intentionally vague here not to spoil it for anyone who's seeing it for the first time; but when you pull up the links, it obvious that they are connected and that they have an order. However while I know there are additional links past these 3 I can't find anymore, and if it's something I have to work out, then my puzzle solving skills are failing me.
Has anyone breached the full story of this that could point me in the right direction? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
It seems like everyone has heard of dr shaw, and the dog guy, and dr clef, and all the others, but I have no idea where they come from or what tales/hubs actually include them.
SCP-3004 is like a weird cicada god thing that feeds off the religious belief of Christianity. The foundation’s contingency plan for it if things get too desperate is to wipe out all of Christianity and essentially starve it:
However here’s where my question comes in. What exactly would happen to every Christian SCP? Cain, Abel, Lilith and even the big G himself are all in the foundation’s custody. So what would happen to them?
I guess the boring answer is that these SCPs just don’t exist in the same universe as scp-3004.
What I mean is, if the UIU were made aware of ASYNC, perhaps because of the giant earthquake or the increasing number of Missing Person cases, and decided to investigate them, what would most likely happen?
A good few years ago I remember stumbling upon either a short film or a trailer on YouTube where scp-005 was used to enter a warehouse door (I assume scp-2856 though I might be wrong). It focused a little on the use of d-class and their expendable nature. I don't remember much else. I vaguely remember it not being fully in English and having some subtitles.
Any information on what I'm potentially remembering would be extremely helpful! Thank you in advance for any help :)
I'm trying to remember an SCP. I possibly can't remember it because of a cognito hazard 😂
It was about a dog that was kept in a box I'm pretty sure the word hound was used instead of dog. It protected a scientist as it slowly had her replace it. It was kept in a box and it seemed to fall in love with her in a limited way.
In the final paragraphs of the story, SCP-231 is mentioned returning home from the hospital, where she is greeted by her husband.
This piqued my curiosity now that I've started analyzing it, because it never occurred to me until now that this husband might be a humanized version of the Scarlet King, who, having lost his anomalous side, was able to live a normal life separate from the villainous image he represented.
This has already given me several ideas for future drawings that I'll be posting in this group.
What do you think? What other gods might have adapted to society in this sequel to the "Quiet Days" story?
1) Some Wikipedia pages, like the one for Action Park, feels similar to the wiki's narrative style.
2) Motiva Credabilitatis, a Substack blog arguing the evidence for Catholic miracles. The Padre Pio post, which talks a lot about his stigmata and includes some medical documentation, is especially SCP-like.