I think the title of the book "The Silver Eyes" have to do with the endoskeleton eyes or maybe the Nightmare animatronic’s eyes. Those white glowing eyes we saw through every single FNaF games aren’t white but instead silver. The “human element” could be about the “dream theory” as dreaming is a human quality, or element. The book could be about crying child seeing these “silver eyes” haunting him.
I Like the idea of why the title could be silver eyes. I mean the title of the book is supposed to be what the entire book is, and for a title of a fnaf book “The Silver Eyes” maybe the book is in the perpective of the animatronics, through the “siver eyes”. Keep in mind that the eyes of the Freddy on the cover have glowing red eyes. Maybe this is just symbolic in some way.
And I never even thought about the idea of the “human element” to be the dream theory. That makes sense. I mean everyone was thinking about the Purple guy when you think of a human, but we know him already. I personally believe that the dream theory is correct because I believe Scott Cawthon set up the story this way the entire time and we didint even realize it. Everyone was noticing so many connections to the first game and the fourth game, like the animatronics attack locations and the bedroom setup. Even the phone guy we hear in the backround of everything in the fourth game. We all kind of just thought it was Scotts way of somehow creating connections to the first game as it was the last fnaf game that we were playing. But I think it all makes sense that they are so alike because IT WAS ALL A DREAM. Although i kind of dont want to believe in this theory because it means everything else we theorized about the games all lead up to the reveal that it was all just a dream, but it kind of makes sense for that to be true.
Scott is so cleaver in the way he created the games. So many secrets and plot twists and easter eggs, and its interesting to see that Scott Cawthon has built up this story, but the entire time was planning on making it all just a dream. To me it’s, in a way, genious.













