News for November, 2024

DISCLAIMER: This is the Site News for the English Branch of the SCP Wiki. The opinions of the individual members of the Site News team that are presented in each edition of the Site News are their own thoughts and are not meant to be representative of the Site News team as a whole nor are they representative of the staff body as a whole. If you take issue with any of the contents, then feel free to reach out to the editor(s) and they will review the contents to see if there are any edits that need to be made. We intend to always deliver interesting content to you, and we understand that there may be times where controversial or unpopular opinions will be presented whether by our writers or our editor(s). Thank you for your understanding!

Stories and Editorials

Can you believe 2024 means 13 years of the annual SCP wiki art exchange? Amazing right? The art exchange is a great chance for authors and artists of all different mediums to share their creativity while graciously giving to fellow members of the community!

Art Exchange is essentially a secret santa for the SCP Wiki. Participants will post a list of things they can gift to others and any gifts they will want to receive. The organizers will then pair participants with each other, and everyone will secretly make a gift for their recipient!

Keep your eyes peeled for sign ups starting on the 10th-15th of November! But be aware, AE is doing things a little differently this year. This year, the organizers are adding the Naughty list. What does this mean? This means if you ghost the exchange, you'll be unable to enter next year's exchange. Please remember that if you can't complete your piece to send a PM to the exchange runners before hand!

If you'd like to check out the history of the art exchange, check out the art exchange hub!

- By DianaBerry


October is over, and Anthology 2024 has come to a close! Anthology is an event where authors released a single horror article for each day of October. This year's Anthlogy theme was phobias! We had an interview with S D LockeS D Locke, the organizer for Anthology 2024:

What were the inspirations of Anthology when it first started?

1.) The inspiration was drawn from an experimental project from a collection of accounts I assume to be one or two users, that being the original HARBINGER.

It was a series of 10 SCPs posted either back-to-back or over a series of days, I cannot recall, but that each centered around a looming threat. Despite none surviving the voting process, in part due to their peculiarities and likely in part to their ambition and being posted by new accounts (I assume were sock puppets owing to familiarity with certain aspects of site lore) I still admired the attempt and collaborative approach. It was also inspired by the serialized set of works some have released such as Kalinin’s 001 or Matroyshka series, or series authored by HarryBlank. In our hobby site, it is often seen where tale series and the like will fall through or be left incomplete, so I appreciate when people stick to a strict schedule and follow through with completion of a series.

I ran the 10-article HARBINGER II in 2021, as a direct successor to the inspiring project. It went well enough, tasking myself and 9 other authors to a strict release schedule of 10 SCPs centered around a vague and looming threat. The experience was rather fun, and at its conclusion I decided a scheduled series in this vein could be bigger and better— thus the ABCs of Death was formed the following year.

Anthology 2022 had The ABC’s of Death, and Anthology 2023 had Tarot Cards and it was in collaboration with The Wanderers Library. This year is all about Phobias, what got you to consider phobias for this year event?

2.) While I modeled the 2022 anthology after the horror film anthology of the same name, I chose Phobias as I’d simply needed something that was a broad enough category that would allow authors a wide selection of subject matter and still be a collection under the same thematic umbrella.

I have nothing to do with the 2023 Tarot anthology, aside from offering a bit of advice to the project coordinator at its inception. Though, I do appreciate the torch was carried for that year, and from what I hear our sister wikis have undertaken the task of running their own anthologies (there was one on JP branch last year, if I am not mistaken).

How do you and other authors manage and plan this event?

3.) I’ve managed this event much as I did in 2022. Connecting with various authors and inviting them to the team based off my familiarity with/appreciation of their work.

This year was a bit different as I wanted to open the floor to both newer authors as well as those outside my limited scope of awareness. As such several members were more or less voted on or suggested by other team members.

Whereas 2022’s began Oct 2021, this year I only began full operation with my volunteer thread on the mainsite back in February. More time is nice and all, but it is quite hard for most people to know their internet activity plans a whole year in advance.

In either case, the team has a dedicated discord server to ideate and plan their entries and seek feedback from the team. Most keep their inclusion under-wraps as I feel the surprise at who has joined is a fun reveal each day, and also keeps the new articles fresh for the community— they’ve not been passed around for critique to the point everyone has seen it, so it keeps the experience of each story fresh for the majority of readers.

What are your favorite entries so far?

4.) So far I’m quite fond of Montague’s entry. So much so that I reorganized our posting schedule to place his draft as our Day 1. I just felt it was an appropriate way to kick off the project. Cubeflix’s in particular is quite unnerving, Croque’s is a technical marvel, and Rounder’s was an enjoyable experience (doubly so as it was fresh for myself and the team as well. Nobody had seen the draft until it was posted!).

In all though, my personal favorite has yet to be released at time of writing. Our Halloween submission. Not the most bombastic epic piece, but it is one that frightened me in a way no other submission has.

What do you think fear or horror is, to you?

5.) Apart from being generally entertaining, it’s a genre that I’ve always seen as incredibly creative in a way you only see with sci-fi and weird fiction, in terms of high concepts and the like. It’s also cathartic in a way, explorations and manifestations of real-world traumas and ills in a way that’s safe but allowing one to reflect on them. Of course, running the gamut, it can also be simple, schlocky, grisly good fun. I grew up with a lot of horror fiction for kids such as Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark and was an avid Goosebumps nerd, so I suppose it just kind of stuck with me. Personally, it’s a fun way to express my creativity and get a reaction out of readers — for someone to note my work gave them nightmares is the kind of praise I hold in higher regard than general appreciation of writing quality (of which I’m undoubtedly outclassed by many on this site).

If an up-and-coming author wanted to participate in Anthology 2025 and onward, how would they sign up and participate?

6.) I will likely take no part in anything that occurs for 2025. Running these is quite a time investment between all the behind the scenes planning, critique, team building and keeping contact with over 30 people for the majority of a year. It takes up my site time in a way that keeps me from contributing in a staff capacity. I do have a fully formed plan for 2026 though, and submissions will be opened to the community at large. More info to come, but not for quite some time.

Do you have any final thoughts you would like to share with readers?

7.) I don’t think there’s anything else I’d like to note outside of what I’ve already expressed here or in the author post for this year’s anthology. I just hope everyone is enjoying the festivities.

- By Strange Matter


Do you like horror and pieces that make your skin crawl? Then you should check out Kyouwacon24 over on the Japanese wiki! There you can read SCPs, GOI formats, and tales with the theme of creepy, crawly, and anything in between that makes you scream! This contest was being hosted for the JP Wiki’s 11th-anniversary event.

The winners are as follows:

Horror department (SCP Category)

Gold award WagnasCousinWagnasCousin with SCP-3991-JP

Silver award indonootokoindonootoko with SCP-2445-JP

Bronze award Something_funya2Something_funya2 with SCP-3963-JP

Horror Category (GOI-Format Cateogry)

Gold award yzkrtyzkrt with Milgram Loyalty Test

Silver award indonootokoindonootoko with 30 years since the Karuizawa girl disappearance incident

Bronze award eggplanteggplant with DEAL Store Page

Fear Division (Tale Category)

Gold award drikaradrikara with Nationwide Spiritual Sensibility Test

Silver award teruteru_5teruteru_5 with Advisor

Bronze award 1NAR11NAR1 with idea

You can check out the contest page here!

- By DianaBerry


At the beginning of October, Forgotten Memories was made into a canon. It exists as a sister canon to On Guard 43 (although it does hold some key differences) that focuses on memetics and ideas having power. The canon and its associated series 'Absence' Makes the Heart Grow Fonder are run and largely written by QueeriousQueerious and heavily feature her original character Heather Garrison.

Thankfully we had the wonderful opportunity to ask Queerious some questions about the canons history and future.

1) What inspired you to begin writing for Forgotten memories and 'Absence'1?

My wife and I were stuck in an airport, in the middle of what was meant to be a 15 minute wait, to a multi-hour delay as our flight was cancelled. On a whim, I opened the SCP Wiki, which I hadn't done in years. I ended up stumbling my way into Bury the Survivors and just… when I read Lillihammer, I realized that what I remembered the SCP Wiki as, versus what it was now were two completely different things.

It spiraled out from there — I had finally found a character, who was like me, a trans woman haunted by her past. I've written before, and knew that I wanted to add my voice to the story. I ended up reaching out to HarryBlankHarryBlank2 via Wikidot PMs, and to my surprise, he answered me. We chatted for a bit, and then I came up with the idea of The Deadname Meme. I wanted to write a piece for the wiki that was not only using a character I loved, paying tribute to an author whose work I deeply enjoyed, and it was a chance for me to put my voice into the characters. Harry is, unfortunately, not a trans woman; I am, and I wanted to give that insight into my depictions. Everything just kind of spiraled from there.

2) Was this always intended to be a canon? If not, why did it become one?

No, not at all. The Deadname Meme was originally going to be a standalone work, where I might have reused the characters in the future. It wasn't until somebody asked me 'Is this going to be a series? It seems like it is.' that I realized, oh, wait. Maybe there is something here.

Immediately after they had asked, I pulled up a sandbox and wrote an outline for the overall series. I still use that outline today, funnily enough, very little has changed in the overarching plot since that initial storm. Not that they're good outlines, mind you, but they're something.

So then, I starting writing it. Pretty soon, it had a Series tag, and I was trying to write side stories, building it out further and finishing out the main narrative. Fortunately, I never follow my own plans. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that I was limiting myself, and the world of Forgotten Memories — it wasn't just the single story anymore, but a much larger universe with lore, character arcs, connective tissue and more. I seized that, and started to push the stories to expand what Forgotten Memories could be; and now it's not just a single story, it's a world of stories about forgotten ideas, margins, and the people who live in them.

3) The canon heavily features the character of and takes place at Site-43. Why did you choose to tie this canon into On Guard 43 instead of another, or even your own original, site and set of characters?

I was inspired from the start by On Guard 43. I loved the characters, and wanted to play with them; writing Heather into the role of a newcomer mirrored my experience in re-discovering the wiki. I had initially just planned on using The Deadname Meme to introduce her character, so that I could write more On Guard 43 pieces in the future, but, like I said above, it definitely spiraled out of control.

It is funny though; I have heard many times that the way I write Lillian is different than Harry, Grigori, or any of the other authors who have written her. She is my interpretation of Lillian: distinctive, but still recognizable as the same character. I wanted to take my lived experiences, and use them with the existing characters, to explore and reveal alternative sides of them, ones that hadn't been touched on before. To me, I wouldn't have been here if not for On Guard 43, so why not put it into that canon?

And well, you know the rest; I did not expect this to become a canon, but here we are. Not to say that the canon is locked to Site-43, it has crossed over with Eventyr, Orcadia, and will eventually feature its own site and cast, but, you'll have to wait for that haha.

4) Now that the second half of 'Absence' has begun, can you share future plans for the series or the wider canon as a whole?

The first half of 'Absence' focused on Heather and Lillian falling in love, and making rash decisions based on impulse — the story focused onto the beginnings, their growth, showing just who they are and why they do what they do. It also set up how the universe works, and established the tone of Forgotten Memories.

Now that I have all that out of the way, I am excited to begin writing the ramifications of their decisions. Every choice they have made so far in the series has consequences, even if they don't realize it yet. The next half is going to be the chips falling where they will.

In terms of where I want to take the overall canon: I've done work into explaining how the universe works, and the general themes, but I really want to dig into 'The Margins' more. In Forgotten Memories, they are the space outside of the Noosphere, between that, and the abyss; it is the home of lost knowledge and impossible ideas. I want to show how many different stories can be told, examining the canon through concepts, ideas, and humanity.

5) Is there any advice you'd have for readers interested in contributing to the canon?

I would say this: if you have a story to tell, a personal one that is about you, one that is screaming to be shared, this is the place for you. At its heart, Forgotten Memories is about memories, ideas, marginalized experiences, and intimacy of all forms; established characters, settings or otherwise aren't the core of Forgotten Memories.

The heart of every story is the struggle to be yourself in a world that deems you as abnormal, a world that has forgotten your story, a world that is terrifying. But it's also a world with people who love and care for one another, and how those personal connections can be some of the most meaningful experiences in a person's life. That is what Forgotten Memories is all about.

6) Do you have any final thoughts you'd like to share with readers?

I haven't been around on the wiki for very long, nor am I an expert in anything. But I can tell you that, no matter who you are, if you are willing to put in the work, if you can listen to and implement feedback, if you can be a part of the critique process, anything is possible.


Make sure to keep an eye out for more works being posted to the canon!

- By ProblemPal


One of the canons that was made official recently was Fading Stars! This is a canon based around culture and systems of belief, where every idea manifests as a god in a world of our subconscious. We had an interview with OriTieflingOriTiefling, the canon runner for fading stars about the canon!

1) In your words, what is fading stars about?

Fading Stars is, at it's core, about how colonial practices slowly erode away at the various things that make us human, and how those systems are perpetuated in the modern day. A lot of human culture and identity was lost in the age of colonization, and continues to be lost or misunderstood today. I wanted to see stories that not only recognized global cultures outside of the mainstream, but also highlighted the fact that the loss of culture is something uniquely painful.

2) What were some of the inspirations for fading stars?

I've done a lot of studies of various world myths, religious, spiritual beliefs, etc. over the years. Initially the inspiration was just an attempt to better represent a wider range of stories on the wiki. When I started writing for the wiki, the idea of a "kinder" site was also still somewhat novel— things like the Integration Program didn't actually exist yet. The more I worked though, the more I wanted to explore the idea of a site that was kind on the surface, but still very much a part of the system at the end of the day.

3) Some of the major themes of fading stars are cultures and systems of belief. How did your own culture and beliefs tie into the canon as you started it?

I place a lot of value in memory. I follow the idea that you die twice— the first death being the physical death, and the second being when your name is said for the last time. That formed a foundation for the setting as a whole. After all, what happens to something divine once it's forgotten? Can something divine die?

Ideally this inspires other people to reflect on the idea of memory too, and take some time to keep the important people they've lost alive by sharing their stories and keeping their names around.

4) When you wrote the first stories in fading stars, were you expecting to make it into a canon? What made you decide to turn it into one?

Yes and no. When I first started writing on the wiki, I did so with the idea I was writing for my own personal self-contained canon. I was originally developing an anomalous town in Georgia, actually, with themes more focused on small town America. You can still see it in articles like SCP-5469. Eventually I did decide I wanted to make Site-58 into a setting, and worked on trying to conceptualize exactly what that setting was going to be.

There comes a point you want to invite others to join in on the things that you're working on, you know? In a way that group participation invites others to find their place in it, and helps it leave an impact. Like I said— it keeps the memory alive. I wanted it to eventually become something beyond just me.

5) Were there any changes or additions to fading stars since its conception that you weren’t expecting?

The Anthology article, actually. I never conceptualized Fading Stars with proper horror in it. Existential dread, sure. Systemic abuse, yeah. But nothing that was properly horror themed. I think the Anthology article (SCP-8558 for reference!) opened some doors for what the setting itself could be.

I'm still outlining some finer details too. As any author knows, things change in outlining, so I wouldn't be shocked to revisit this discussion in a year and go "Yeah a lot of stuff changed lmao"

6) Do you have any tips for authors aspiring to write for this canon?

A good starting point for someone is always coming up with your own god or goddess. In this setting, everything is divine in some way. Even the little things in your world have something that rules it as their domain. Think about something you often overlook, and imagine what a god for it would be like. Have fun from there— have them get up to shenanigans with the Foundation! Or, if you want, explore what would happen to the world if that small, oft overlooked thing were to slowly vanish away.

Your world is made up if a million things you never think about, that you never consider, and yet it would be a little emptier without them wouldn't it?

7) Could you list an article (or several, if you wish) in fading stars that you feel represent the themes of the canon very well? Why do you like them?

SCP-7999 is a quintessential example that, somehow, features no gods at all. It's an article fundamentally about what makes us human, and teaching ourselves not to take things for granted.

SCP-5632 for an example of a goddess of something overlooked by society at large, but means something to vulnerable people.

SCP-8585 for an example of treating the death of a god within the setting, and what a more somber tone looks like here.

SCP-6059 for an example of a hyper-specific god and the kind of fun you can have with them!

The setting itself is meant to be fairly broad at the end of the day, covering a variety of tones and genres. The above give an example of that, and are great starting places for new authors and readers!

8) Do you have any final thoughts for the site news readers?

Everything you write and everything you put out becomes a part of the legacy that you leave behind. Everything, no matter if it's successful or not, has a chance to leave an impact on someone. Take pride in the act of creation, and take pride in sharing your work. It might make a difference to someone out there, and you may never know it.

What we create will outlive us in the end, in ways we are yet to ever know. Through creation we live forever. So keep creating, don't let failure discourage you. I'm proud of you for trying at all.


- By ParallelPotatoes


Could you spook Nico? SPOOK NICO UNOFFICIAL CONTEST 2024 dared to find out, with a special prize to the winners! We had an interview with Uncle NicoliniUncle Nicolini about their experience running this contest:

What was the inspiration of Spook Nico Unofficial Contest 2024?

1.) There's a lot of horror articles on the site, but very few of them actually elicit a response from me. Many of them are just monsters or things that kill you, none of which do anything for me. I wanted to have a contest where people wrote horror with the full intent of scaring me.

What are your favorite entries so far?

2.) SCP-8980 and SCP-8824 are my favorites that have been published. They're both so visceral and vile in their subject matter, they left me feeling bad for a while after reading them. I know almost everyone has read 8980, but I recommend 8824 as well. Plus it's by a first-time author so it's always nice to support them.

In the hub, you stated that SCP-3817 is the scariest article on the site to you. Can you tell us more about that?

3.) Certainly. As an artist, the idea of stagnating and not developing my craft further as times goes on scares me. It may not be the biggest phobia ever or be particularly scary to most people, but I love writing and I do not want to stagnate ever in my career,

Would you do something like this again in the future?

4.) Maybe! Who knows what the future holds. 😉

What got you to choose your contest winners?

5.) One of the winners is decided by upvotes, and seeing as how one entry is at around 600 upvotes, I think that one is pretty sealed haha. The other category, my personal favorite, I have decided to grant to that very same entry becase it honestly is a masterclass. If forsome reason you haven't read SCP-8980, please do so. Unless you find it's subject matter triggering in which case do not.

Do you have any final thoughts to share with readers?

6.) Keep writing. I love reading, and even if I downvote your article, don't be discouraged. You can always improve.

- By Strange Matter


Writing and Art Prompts

Site News is bringing you monthly writing and art prompts! Every month there will be user-submitted prompts to help inspire new pieces. Participation in these prompts is completely optional, and any pages based on the prompts will be featured in the next issue of Site News! If you're interested in submitting a prompt for next Site News, send a wikidot PM to ParallelPotatoesParallelPotatoes. One prompt submission per person, and up to five prompts will be shown in each edition of Site News.

This month's prompts are below!

Shield Submitted by Queerious
There is only 1 total shield SCP on the wiki. Fix that.

It was made for me! Th-this is my slot! Submitted by felixou
Write an SCP article but the slot number you chose for it has to be correlated to the story told. What qualifies as "correlated" is up to you!

Truth is, the game was rigged from the start Submitted by Angryman22
Write something where the reader knows how it's going to end from the beginning. It's always been about the journey and not the destination anyway.

The following articles were inspired by a prompt and written this month!

SCP-QUE13-126 Written by felixou
Inspired by "Deathless Horror" from September 2024's prompts!

SCP-8093 Written by ParallelPotatoes
Inspired by "A new GOI enters the stage" from September 2023's prompts!

If you write an entry inspired by this or a previous month's prompts, feel free to send a wikidot PM to ParallelPotatoesParallelPotatoes to have it featured in the next Site News! There isn't a time limit on getting prompt submissions featured, so feel free to write for a previous month's prompts as well!3


Seminars

Spook Nicon Event Seminar! Sunday, November 10, 2024 2:00 PM EST
With all the spookiness going on, we took a moment to try to scare one of our beloved community members: Uncle NicoliniUncle Nicolini. Did any of us succeed? We'll be reading every Spook Nicon entry (except the double winner Ergophobia, but we'll get to that one) with our lovely voice-acting hosts, and see if any of us or Nico get the shivers! Light some candles, dim the lights, and cover yourself in blankets as we go for a horror hurray!

Writing Club Analysis: Ergophobia! Sunday, November 24, 2024 2:00 PM EST

Ergophobia absolutely exploded on the wiki: the top hit from this year's Anthology, double winner of Spook Nicon, and set to reach +600 within a month. And all for good reason! This piece of brilliant horror writing has so much going for it, whether it's the harrowing events, the sleek and clever formatting, or the lifelike worldbuilding. This Writing Club, we're going to declassify the things that make this piece tick, and hopefully learn something along the way! We'll be joined by the author YossipossiYossipossi themselves to talk about what went into the writing, the preparation, formatting and contents. Join us and shiver in analysis!
Content warnings here: we'll be talking about some heavy sexism themes. It's recommended you read SCP-8980 before the Club, but if you don't want to and don't mind to be spoilered, you can definitely still pick up some writing insights!


Features Last Month

Top Articles of the Month

Ratings of course do not mean everything, but they are representative of what people happened to like seeing at the time. With this in mind, the following are the top-rated works last month, so if by some chance you haven't encountered them yet, be sure to check them out!

Top-Rated SCP

SCP-8980 by Yossipossi: Ergophobia: Without Regards

The following file is undergoing active Ethics Committee investigation for violation of the SCP Foundation's Code of Conduct. Information contained therein may not accurately reflect reality and this document should not be considered a reliable source.

Top-Rated Non-SCP

Unusual Incidents Unit Hub by JackalRelated

FIDELITY ꞏ BRAVERY ꞏ INTEGRITY ꞏ "UNITY IN UNDERSTANDING"


Front Page Features

Every month, an article is selected from each of the three common article types: SCP, Tale, and Group of Interest Format. These three articles are displayed on the front page for the month to bring further recognition to them.

If you would like to view the previous front page features, you can view the archive for the SCPs here, the archive for the Tales here, and the archive for the GoI Formats here!

SCP Article

SCP-8147 by radian628: Worldbuilder

Testing on SCP-8147 is strictly forbidden following the events of Incident 8147-1.

Tale

Plastic Graveyard by Ellie3

A few hours without feeding and they let out a fit of high-pitched shrieks and screams before dropping dead.

GoI-Format

'Endlessly Adapting Lizard' (6GJQG/JT8XH/WOBU2) by Didic, translated by fluxman

It looks like it has surprising regenerative capabilities and can change and adapt to its environment. So, I think it'll be sold at quite a price.


Reviewers' Spotlights

Works are featured on the site’s front page as part of the Reviewers’ Spotlight, which acknowledges the time and effort spent by forum reviewers helping other authors develop and edit and their works for the mainsite. Each month, community members are encouraged to nominate forum reviewers who have been both particularly helpful and active. Members of the Forum Criticism Team will then discuss the nominations, and select four prominent reviewers to choose the month’s Reviewers’ Spotlight front-page features.

If you would like to view previous spotlights, you can view the archive for them here!

1st of October

Mr. Blue Starts a Coup by Ferox Numine [Featured by Fireknight]

President Rojas, the first elected leader of the Democratic Commonwealth of Mystria, elbowed her way to the front of the crowd and gazed out the window, her stoic demeanor masking her spiking heartbeat.

9th of October

SCP-8816 by Aftokrator [Featured by Mister_Toasty]

The absence of any folds or creases in the curtain consistent with a human body behind the curtains suggest that the feet are disembodied, but this has not been confirmed.

17th of October

SCP-8285 by Not Noodles [Featured by Maplestrip]

SCP-8285 has bowled an estimated 43 perfect games, with eight consecutive perfect games having been recorded at the local bowling alley.

25th of October

They thought he was your boyfriend by rottingraisins [Featured by GlassAutomaton]

They granted you a Level 2 clearance when they recruited you onto Alpha-9.

SCP Data & Trends

All the goings-on of the site condensed into bite-sized takeaways! Is there a statistic or figure you would be interested in knowing? Let us know and we can feature it next time!

november2024-1.pngnovember2024-2.pngnovember2024-3.pngnovember2024-4.pngnovember2024-5.png

Like before, we are still renovating this section. It will likely be a couple months, but we will soon have a nice little stats section here. In the meantime, please enjoy our monthly charts.

Also, what do YOU want to see in the monthly stats section? Any data you want to know about? Please leave a comment about it in the Discussion page or use this anonymous google form.

- By Data Analysis Team

New Content this Month

There is a multitude of wonderful works that are posted to the Wiki every month whether they be SCP articles, Tales, GoI Formats, Art pages, Author Pages, Essays, and more! Below, we have all of the creations for this month listed out by week and type (except for art pages, we did that earlier!) We have added little emojis next to articles that qualify to add some additional content. Below we have listed out the emojis we use and what they mean. Be sure to give them a look!

🤝 = Co-authored works - It is always interesting to see the dynamics of how people work together!
🌐 = International works - Articles translated from one of our international branches!
💯 = Articles rated at +100 and higher - These are articles that have seen success and should be celebrated for it!
📈 = SCP articles rated under +30 and Tales and GoI Formats rated under +20 - Let's show these a little love!


Week of October 1st


SCP Articles

Tales

GoI Formats

Art

Miscellaneous Pages


Week of October 7th


SCP Articles

  • SCP-8894- Written by cubeflix.
  • 💯 SCP-8339- Written by Ecronak.
  • 🤝 SCP-8084- Written by basirskipreader and FLOORBOARDS.
  • SCP-8810- Written by DrBleep.
  • 💯 SCP-8876- Written by J Dune.
  • 📈 SCP-6517- Written by Dr Ch_M.
  • SCP-8470- Written by DoctorLilithSophia.
  • SCP-8067- Written by daveyoufool.
  • 📈 SCP-8920- Written by AgathyrsiVril.
  • 💯 SCP-8430- Written by bigslothonmyface.
  • 💯 SCP-8558- Written by OriTiefling.
  • 🤝 SCP-8335- Written by Alzin Cdag, Esriel, IndustryStandard, and J_V_G.
  • 💯 SCP-8822- Written by Croquembouche.

Tales

GoI Formats

Art

Miscellaneous Pages


Week of October 14th


SCP Articles

Tales

GoI Formats

Art

Miscellaneous Pages


Week of October 21st


SCP Articles

Tales

GoI Formats

Art

Miscellaneous Pages


Week of October 28th


SCP Articles

  • SCP-8160- Written by IndustryStandard.
  • 📈🤝 SCP-8519- Written by DianaBerry and VapidPoem.
  • SCP-8109- Written by DrClef.
  • 📈🌐 SCP-FRA31-236- Written by Cauchynambour. Translated by Prismal.
  • 📈🌐 SCP-ES-076- Written by Uncle Nicolini.
  • SCP-8934- Written by Karathh.
  • 📈 SCP-7031- Written by Mechatroniks.
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