I'll try and let people work things out for themselves here, but Document 792-1704 is indeed intended to reference SCP-792.
Also, google the names and shit.
if your reading this your gay
I'll try and let people work things out for themselves here, but Document 792-1704 is indeed intended to reference SCP-792.
Also, google the names and shit.
if your reading this your gay
At first I thought it would be some sort of weird Legion from Castlevania ripoff, but instead it turned out pretty interesting. I like the sort of irony that most of the victims lived their lives in the hopes of a heaven or an all powerful being, but instead got stuck in a giant human katamari. (Wait, that reminds me of something.)
fully conscious human skeletons (hereby SCP-1704-1).
All skeletons composing SCP-1704, hereby SCP-1704-1
This is redundant. Otherwise, nice skip, grab a +1 on your way out.
Good catch, thanks.
if your reading this your gay
So… these guys are being kicked out of the afterlife by some bum, because the Foundation is researching 792?
I'm not saying that it's not related to 792 (because I don't know), but what I was trying to get through with that line was that research they did on 792 was relevant to containing the breach.
Thinking about it though, that really does make a lot of sense… huh…
if your reading this your gay
This is pretty horrifying, particularly the part about incorporation into the structure being some sort of envy-driven revenge.
I thought the GOC inclusion was a tad extraneous, but not in the way that extraneous GoI inclusions tend to drag articles down. In other words, it could work with or without, unless you're planning something larger of course. And I assume it remanifests in the spot it vanished from?
Thanks for the compliment ^_^
It does indeed remanifest in the spot it vanished from.
I put in the GOC mainly because A) I like it when they work with the Foundation, 'cause it makes the SCP files feel more like part of a larger SCP universe, and B) I don't imagine the Foundation being as occult-savvy as the GOC, and they're less likely to be fucking around with portals, so it would make more sense for them to get involved in a GOC situation than to initiate it on its own.
if your reading this your gay
Drs. Sanmugasunderam and O'Cruadhlaoich
These names are too short. Make them longer. Please. Thank you.
if your reading this your gay
It's good, and I like the Foundation-GOC cooperation but this addendum:
Addendum: Requests to modify SCP-1704's containment chamber to render it soundproof are denied pending unforeseen budgetary allowances.
Is kinda silly. Soundproofing isn't particularly expensive, certainly not compared to the productivity loss of your employees being distracted by the never-ending screams of the damned.
Also, I was planning on doing an afterlife SCP, but it seems you beat me to it. Ah well.
I'll change that addendum.
And hey, I did mention that three other SCPs came out of that breach. There's definitely room for more afterlife SCPs.
if your reading this your gay
This is good and you should feel good.
On an unrelated note, this makes me think of the end of that Hitler vs Stalin comic.
I feel obliged to inquire why you gave it the "numen" class suffix. I've never seen it before, either on other SCPs or on the "object classes" page, and its meaning is not revealed in the article. Is it related to the object's association with the GOC? It might improve the article to inform the reader, at some point, what "numen" means when appended to an object class and why this object qualifies for that special classification. Failing that, I might recommend simply removing the "numen" part, since it doesn't add anything by itself and bothered me from the back of my head the entire time I was reading.
i think he just puts it on all his scps. I haven't found a good reason for it yet, but i hope too eventually
Slight necropost. Numen (pl. Numina) is a latin term for spirits in general, most often used for nature spirits of less than divine power, but sometimes used for everything from lemures to the gods. -Double checked and correcting myself- BUT, over the long history of Rome, and even longer use of latin, that is only one of a slew of definitions, mostly relating to the divine.
That might put the designation in perspective. I'd guess that the designation indicates a spiritual threat. Keter, by some descriptions, wouldn't technically include things that leave the corporeal world untouched.