He'll be fine!
Alt ver under cut

#dc#dc comics#batman#dick grayson#bruce wayne#tim drake#batfam#dc fanart#batfamily




seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
seen from South Korea
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
He'll be fine!
Alt ver under cut
Opps, uploaded this last week and completely forgot about all my art accounts.
This is part of my dark fantasy for Fnaf.
Simple explanation is the ghosts have armies of robot animals, kidnap villagers, and then nothing good happens before, during, or after this. It just bloody chaos 24/7.
So have Golden Freddy
Quarry is demisexual, Goldmine is gay, and the two are in a relationship! (Requested by anonymous)
Smol jumbled friends
A Response to MattPat’s most recent FNAF Theory
I haven't read the second novel yet, so correct me if I’m wrong. Just some thoughts and speculations I had while watching the video.
Okay, honestly, why did we take Scott’s word on the books and the games being separate canons? All Scott has ever done since he released the first game was troll the fan base. We all believed that and just accepted it, until Scott released Sister Location, bringing William Afton from his books into his games. The only main difference between the books and the games Afton is in the book William Afton became Springtrap, while in the game it was Michael Affton who became Springtrap.
With the new release of his book, The Twisted Ones, Scott created more links between the books and the games, further explaining the motives and animatronics in the games through his novel. The books and the games are becoming too related to be thought of as separate canons. They still could be, but the stories and the lore are becoming too closely related.
Now, if these two stories, the novels and the lore of the games, are in the same universe that leaves major plot holes. Other than the difference in who Springtrap is, one major flaw is the Sister Location facility being hidden under the FNAF 4 house. In the games, it is speculated that the house belongs to William Afton, which makes sense since the animatronics in Sister Location are under his trademark. It makes sense for this murderous psychopath to hide his malicious creations under his house, away from suspicion and possible thievery that could occur if it were in a facility above ground that could be easily spotted to break into or to be further inspected by those of authority. Yet, according to the novel, The Twisted Ones, it is Charlie’s house that is the FNAF 4 house, and not Afton’s, implying that Afton worked with Henry to develop and create the animatronics we see in Sister Location. In the first novel, we assumed Henry killed himself via his animatronic because of the kidnapping of his son and his wife leaving him as a result, and, to top it off, his industry continuously failing for being connected with a bunch of child abductions and murders, even though he was still caring for Charlie. Knowing that Henry was working with William on the animatronics hidden below his home, he probably was overcome with grief and guilt once he realized Afton’s cruel ambitions with these new animatronics. Realizing his partner was a twisted man, seeking to kidnap and kill a bunch of children, and the fact that he just helped him create weapons to feed into his sick ambitions, Henry became mad and had his recent creation kill himself. Now, in FNAF World, we see the creator, Henry, killed by Baby. If the games and the books are interrelated, the animatronic that Henry used to kill himself was Baby, who is suspected to be haunted by Afton’s British daughter.
While linking the game and the books as one canon, answers many questions that arise within the game’s lore, it also leaves one major plot hole: the house located above the underground Sister Location facility. In the game, it insinuates that the house above (the house in FNAF 4) the Sister Location facility is William Afton’s home. We learned in the game that Afton had a daughter who he failed to keep safe from his new animatronics, as much as he warned. So we know he had a daughter and a son, named Michael Afton. So the games tell us William Afton had a daughter and an older son, as the house in FNAF 4 had. But what about the younger son that dies in that game? No information in Sister Location is given about this younger son, given that the house above the location is indeed Afton’s home.
Now with the books, it doesn’t connect with the game. We know Charlie had a twin brother, and no other information is given about an older sibling. That, and in the first novel, it is revealed that Charlie’s twin brother was kidnapped right in front of her by Afton in the Spring Bonnie suit, whereas in the game, the young boy of the house had his frontal lobe bit by Fredbear, later dying in a hospital setting.
So those are the major two plot holes that arise if these two canons are the same and not separate as Scott claims them to be. Who is Springtrap actually, and whose house is above the Sister Location facility?
dd and jj from pa2 are SO gay and i LOVE THEM
To anyone that missed downloading FNAF World from Google play, you can download the APK file (for android only) with the link above.
@magicalhedgehogs
MORE GAYS WOO