Noncanon but appears in UCN? Nightmare BB is canon and appears in UCN but nightmarionne isn’t? Don’t you think this is weird?
Noncanon but appears in UCN? Nightmare BB is canon and appears in UCN but nightmarionne isn’t? Don’t you think this is weird?
... Yeah, that kinda does cause a bit of a problem.
Only if you're one of those dorks still playing these games and trying to hold onto anything that resembles real world logic. This series left logic behind a while back, in fact I'm fairly sure it never had it.
I don't think it left behind logic, I just think it's following a different type of logic. Scott's been naturally leaning towards sci-fi for the entire franchise. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure that touch-screen tablets didn't exist in the 1980's.
It's not just how absurdly high tech the FNAF universe is I'm talking about simple logic here. The premise of the original game alone is nuts, work 7 whole nights under minimum wage in a job that could kill you quite painfully for a company that will wait 90 days before declaring you're dead whilst they clear out your remains. That's actually insanity and no don't give me that 'but Mike is the undead son of William Afton going after his father' because that was not planned back when he first made that game.
I'm not saying that the games have a fair amount of elements that are very hard to believe, I'm just saying that FNAF isn't following our simple real-world logic. This is a fictional universe, so why should it have to abide by non-fictional rules?
Oh, absolutely. FNAF is definitely one of the most bizarre games out there when it comes to logic, but it still does follow its own rules.
I know this is kinda stating the obvious, but Scott really does put a lot of thought into the story. Sure, some of his decisions may have been a little bit... creative... but he never really makes any of the additional information from previous games completely irrelevent. At best, he offers a general idea of how things work. At worst, it's a vague explanation that, on the surface, seems to contradict previous info.
I have this feeling that vagueness is intentional, Scott's fluid storytelling kind of feels like that as a way to allow the audience to fill those gaps themselves. I think that's probably the secret brilliance and frustrating truth of FNAF's story.
Pretty much, yeah.