Thoughts on "Restricted_Salvation"
An analysis on the Prototypes behavior and speech according Jessica Newman
Today I want to talk about one of the videos from Poppy Playtime that has genuinely been living rent free in my head ever since I saw it. One I can replay over and over again without getting tired of it.
I’m talking about restricted_salvation — the video where we finally learn what happened to Preston Willard and Jessica Newman.
What makes this video so fascinating to me is the entire interaction between the Prototype and Newman. The way the Prototype speaks to her is incredibly revealing, and I want to break that down.
So… What happens?
Here is the video if you can want to check it out:
https://youtu.be/HCXE75VR0NI?is=GRTexEC_zc9BSTFC
After Newman and Preston had been hiding for quite a long time, around ten days, Preston was eventually found and dragged away by Huggy. Jessica wanders through the labs alone, desperately searching for Preston and a way out.
Instead, she first encounters a pair of glowing eyes somewhere in a storage area… and then she meets the Prototype himself.
About those eyes: I honestly think they belong to CatNap. He stalks her, but never attacks. Possibly because of their past. Newman was deeply involved in CatNap’s conditioning and torture. CatNap brutally killed many others, but it honestly wouldn’t surprise me if he hesitated with her specifically. Maybe because he hates her, but also fears her on some level.
But that’s just a small side note. What follows afterward is one of the most interesting and character-defining moments for the Prototype in the entire game.
Newman keeps moving forward, while the eyes stop following her. Suddenly, though, she’s blinded, chased through the dark, slips, and crashes to the floor. Moments later she discovers the Prototype looming directly above her, and she is horrified by his appearance.
What’s interesting here is that the Prototype chooses to hunt her first. He intentionally scares her, making loud noises and driving her into a panic. It’s cruel. Deliberate. He could have killed her immediately, but instead he chooses to terrify her first. He wanted her to suffer. And we already know the Prototype is perfectly capable of appearing silently, taking what he wants, or striking without warning.
What follows next is pure humiliation and psychological torture, as brief as the interaction may be.
The moment Newman sees him, she stammers out, “Oh God.” Her tone implies genuine shock, which suggests she recognized him, but not in this particular form. That, in turn, could imply that the spider-like body was built during the Prototype’s escape and shortly before the Hour of Joy. And that made me wonder about something else.
Newman was heavily involved in manipulating the experiments and openly supported Miss Grace’s methods. So was the Prototype also under Newman’s supervision at some point? Preston was her partner, and we know he worked closely with the Prototype. Preston himself admitted he hated seeing how broken the experiments became after all the indoctrination and conditioning. Could the same thing have happened to the Prototype? Did they try to break and condition him too, just to make him more obedient?
That idea becomes even more interesting once the dialogue starts.
“Good evening, Dr. Newman.”
The Prototype starts off loud and almost cheerful, hypocritically polite even, but then his tone becomes deeply condescending, almost mocking, especially in the way he says her name. It has this feeling of: Well, well… look who we have here. He also puts particular emphasis on her name with obvious spite. You can immediately hear the contempt in his voice. Then comes the line that really convinced me the Prototype went through the same conditioning methods as experiments like CatNap or Huggy:
“Now, now, doctor… We must obey. Isn’t that right?”
I genuinely think he’s imitating her here. Or even quoting her. The line “isn’t that right?” implies she must have said those words before. The experiments were supposed to obey her and the other scientist. That’s what she demanded from them. And now he demands the same from her. She should submit to her fate. Another thing I noticed here: unlike Preston, he never uses her first name. He creates distance between them. She’s just another scientist. Another doctor. Calling her by her title ‘Dr’, when she has no authority left, feels deeply mocking. The power dynamic has completely reversed. Jessica then apologizes for the things she said and did, but if you listen to her previous tapes, the apology feels incredibly hollow. She isn’t truly sorry. She’s terrified for her life. And honestly? She has every reason to be. The Prototype answers with sarcasm to her apology:
“That’s… funny.”
Again, incredibly condescending. He probably does find it amusing that she suddenly apologizes now, after everything that happened. Amusing, but also pathetic.
Then he continues:
“You are the second person I’ve met today who’s said that.”
His tone shifts slightly there. Sure, that could simply be because the Prototype constantly cycles through different voices, but it also feels intentional. That sentence carries so many implications. The meaning feels almost sarcastic: Funny how everyone suddenly regrets everything once the tables turn. At the same time, he’s using it to scare her even more. He absolutely knew she was looking for Preston. One of them had already been caught. Now she is next. And he doesn’t even bother hiding who he’s talking about, because immediately afterward he says:
“The other was my good friend Preston.”
The emphasis on good friend is what makes the line so fascinating. He says it in such a lighthearted way, almost casually, and yet there’s obvious irony behind it. Both of them know Preston and the Prototype were never truly “friends” in a normal sense. Either he’s mocking them both… or he genuinely means it. And honestly? I think he does. I think the Prototype truly saw Preston as some kind of ally, even if he clearly considered himself above him. Then comes the line that stayed with me the most:
“Preston was always nice to me.”
He says it almost thoughtfully. Quietly. You can hear the weight behind it. The implication that he endured unimaginable things — but Preston was kind to him. Always. And that mattered to him. That’s what suddenly makes the entire conversation deeply personal. Because right after that, he says:
“You were never very nice, were you, Dr. Newman?”
It’s phrased half like a question and half like a statement. A trap disguised as politeness. Spoken with this eerie layer of exaggerated calmness. And then he pauses mid-sentense, almost forcing the meaning to sink in.
She was never kind. Not once.
And now that becomes her downfall.
On the other hand, it’s very interesting that he actually uses the argument of ‘being nice’. In fact, there’s something rather childish about this sentence, because this kind of accusation is typical of a child: ‘You’re not being nice to me. Be nicer.’
Those words also strongly implies that the two of them knew each other long before this moment. He frames her cruelty as something personal, but there’s another detail that makes it even more personal. Throughout the conversation, the Prototype constantly changes voices. But by the end, he finishes using CatNap’s voice.
And that is important.
Because the Prototype never imitates CatNap anywhere else in the game. Not once. But here he does. The Prototype and CatNap clearly share an extremely important bond. They knew each other before Theodore became CatNap. Theo helped him. Theo got hurt. And the Prototype sacrificed his own freedom trying to save him, only for Theodore to be turned into CatNap and tortured anyway.
By Newman.
And while speaking, the Prototype slowly forms his hand into the shape of a sharp needle, making it painfully clear what’s about to happen to Newman
That’s karma. Catharsis. Personal vengeance.
Using CatNap’s voice is his way of telling her why she’s going to die without him needing to say it outright. Theo was another person she never had been nice to. Another victim Newman helped destroy. And now she pays for it.
The entire interaction drips with mockery, bitterness, hatred, and spite. The Prototype sounds calm and controlled on the surface, but underneath it all he’s seething with rage. He kills with calculation.
And honestly? Deserved. Fuck Jessica.
But the tape keeps going — and somehow becomes even more interesting afterward.
The Prototype is later shown inside his lab, setting down a CatBee patchwork experiment. It sits there silent and motionless, with only its eyes moving. Then the Prototype says:
“I’m so glad you were there when I needed you, Preston.”
The emphasis is on glad. Unlike with Jessica, he actually sounds sincere here. He isn’t really mocking him this time. Without Preston, the Hour of Joy probably never could have happened. Then, he emphasizes there. Preston was there for him. Just like he told Newman earlier — Preston was always kind to him and apparently listened to him. Of course, this line can also imply that the Prototype is simply grateful Preston was easy to manipulate. Preston happened to be there when he needed someone to help him escape. But I honestly think there was genuine appreciation there too. Preston regretted what Playtime was doing. He questioned their methods. And because of that, he helped the Prototype. Only to turn into the biggest hypocrite of them all, calling the Prototype the devil because he seeks revenge.
At the end, the Prototype’s voice becomes almost gentle:
“Now, I can be there for you… always.”
And by that point, we already know what happened. The Prototype turned Preston into an experiment. He did to Preston exactly what Preston and the others allowed to happen to countless victims. Which means the Prototype never fully trusted him. Never fully forgave him either. And that’s exactly why the tape is called restricted salvation. This is not true salvation. It’s conditional. Twisted. Limited.
And even that title can be interpreted in multiple ways. Maybe it means the Prototype refuses to grant Preston the mercy of death, instead trapping him in a state that merely resembles it.
Or maybe, in the Prototype’s mind, transforming Preston into one of “his own” is a reward. A grotesque form of acceptance. Mercy in the most horrifying way possible. That fits the Prototype perfectly. He doesn’t kill Preston outright, even though Preston was still part of the factory employees. Instead, he forces him to swallow his own medicine. And perhaps the Prototype even sees that as kindness.
Either way, the Prototype seems satisfied with the outcome. Satisfied with his work.
He leaves while humming softly to himself.
And humming is usually associated with comfort, happiness, satisfaction.
Everything went according to plan.
This tape is incredibly revealing because it says so much about the Prototype as a character and about how he views every single Playtime employee. We already know he killed innocent people too. But the tape makes it clear that even the ones who treated him “better” are not spared from his hatred. He shows no true mercy to anyone. To him, they are all the same.
Maybe not all of them were fully aware of everything happening inside the factory, but they were still part of the system. Gears in the system that created him.
Honestly, Preston may have been the Prototype’s very first personal experiment. Who knows.bBut this tape feels special.
It shows just how deep Playtime’s cruelty wounded the Prototype. They broke him. Fed him hatred, bitterness, and spite until that was all that remained.
They turned him into a monster.
And now they have to pay for it.















