Seeking Greenlights: Yes
Page Type: SCP Article
Genre (Optional): I don’t know what I’d consider this.
Page Layout (Optional): Standard article format, maybe with a picture, and some observation logs included in addenda.
Elevator Pitch: It’s a pack of printer paper, and if you fold any of that paper into origami, it will turn into whatever the intended form was. However, the more important thing is what it created.
Central Narrative: Now, it is just printer paper that will turn into whatever you tried to fold it into, but 50% of the time, it will turn into an object that appears to be related to someone's life. This would lead up to an experiment log, where they tried to fold a human. They got a middle-aged male out of it (the person the objects related to). Folding a human never worked again. When interviewed, the man revealed that he had lived once before, but was mostly a normal person. However, he lost mostly everything during an attack on his village during WWII, including his family. Living without anybody, he spent all of his time making origami, wishing he could just fold his family, house, and everything back. Of course, that never worked. He tried to make a new life after the war ended, and upon reaching adulthood, tried to develop a love life. Nothing ever worked, though, because he just wanted everything back, and that drove people away. He ended up committing suicide at the age of 34. (Note: The story would be accomplished through experiment logs with the multitude of objects, and finally, with a reveal featuring the created person.) A paper factory (the source of this SCP object) was constructed on the site of the destroyed village a few decades later. When the man is taken into Foundation custody following his creation, he would be allowed access to a few of the items that resulted from the experiments.
Hook/Attention-Grabber: What appears to be a simple document turns out to be a rather deep story of someone's life in the 20th century through addenda.
Additional Notes: I have edited this page to add a lot more to the premise, and am adding the old Central Narrative here because all of these properties apply, but will no longer hold such an important place in the article in terms of story. This is mostly just the description.










