SCP of the Day (93)
SCP-222 "Clone Coffin" - Euclid Class
Italian tunnels house amnesiac-clone-producing coffin.
(Wikipage)
seen from Russia

seen from Japan
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Germany

seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from T1

seen from Switzerland

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
SCP of the Day (93)
SCP-222 "Clone Coffin" - Euclid Class
Italian tunnels house amnesiac-clone-producing coffin.
(Wikipage)
Why do some SCP articles’ images disappear?
SCP-222, for example. I specifically remember there being a picture of it the first time I read it, a sp00ky photo of a dark tunnel with the coffins next to the wall. Actually I just googled SCP-222 and found it on what I guess was the Korean version of the SCP wiki????
But now that picture is gone from the article itself in the English wiki. I can’t remember any other specific numbers at the moment, but there are several SCP pages I’ve read at least twice. The first time there’s a picture, and the second time I see it months later, the picture is gone. Did the photos’ real-life out-of-character owners make copyright claims or something? Did the SCP’s writer suddenly decide they didn’t like the picture? Or was there an in-character decision to ~redact~ the image? SCPs are so much more fun when they have pictures of them, and it always weirds me out when I go back to an SCP I’ve already seen and the picture’s gone.
A coffin with unusual properties…and not the reanimating kind either
Item #: SCP-222
Object Class: Euclid
THIS DOCUMENT NOT FOR USE BY PERSONNEL BELOW CLEARANCE LEVEL 3
Special Containment Procedures: SCP-222 itself requires no special containment. It also cannot be moved. The site is guarded by SCP personnel as well as a rotating mix of US, Italian, and NATO soldiers (none of whom are aware of its significance). SCP personnel travel to and from the site very often, and their true numbers are carefully hidden from the soldiers (and usually from personnel below clearance level 3).
Description: SCP-222 designates an area of tunnels in the Dolomites mountains, near Aviano, Italy. The site is close to the Church of St. Gregory, and Aviano Air Force Base is also nearby. The tunnels are filled with carved stone coffins; one coffin in particular has unusual properties, and some portion of the tunnels are also involved. The carvings in the tunnels appear very old and of fairly good workmanship. History Function Notes