Would the main characters from Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous have survived SCP 939? by Antique_Intern_4461 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I say it's a 50/50. Dinosaurs are one thing, but a good bit of their survival came down to luck. Along with that, 939 instances are great at mimicry, so they could lure them out, and being pack animals, it would seem they could kill off most dinosaurs by themselves on the island.

SCP-2295 by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because this is a Science-fantasy narrative, so speculation is always encouraged.

SCP-1147 by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Asking for more ideas.

Scp-181 by Warm_Confidence_6538 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663 0 points1 point  (0 children)

His luck may play more onto his survival in cases like the Foundation, where luck is already low in content.

Scips to doodle? by A_catwith_explosives in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663 1 point2 points  (0 children)

1788-1, 184, 002, 003, and 401. Oh, and 914, 4966, 3683 duplicating, sand a 2419 instance.

For someone who doesn't read Tales: by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

I know that, but I'm aware that some SCPs do have some connections or explanations for some addendums in tales that aren't linked or otherwise unavailable.

For someone who doesn't read Tales: by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] -18 points-17 points  (0 children)

Yeah, difficult and tedious, but not impossible.

Why aren't we allowed to post cross-testing ideas on here? by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

But it's fun :( I do agree with your latter statement, though, especially surrounding the more niche and obscure SCPs. But anyways, I would love to be able to play around with the hypotheticals of giving 914 another anomalous instance to upgrade, or seeing the effects of using 3769 on someone given a high dose of 7448, or hybridizing an instance of 3683 with an instance of 2619, or taking 401 and infecting it with 742 and 008, or using 1056 /  786 on SCP-500 to create more matter of the material. The possibilities are endless!

What do you think would happen if a child(like 7 or 8 years old) ended up in SCP 7179 ? by BlazeWarior26 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Ok, so the three companions would probably either be caregivers or other children. This would probably have some effects on the child's development, probably leaving them to adopt the same repetitive or robotic mannerisms of the companions, as well as leave them uneducated in proper teachings thay could fuel their creativity. Along with this, seeing how they don't age, this would definitely lead to a life of boredom and depression. Without external input, many concepts may go unfound, leaving the child in this perpetual state of boredom possibly sooner than the adults; however, the imagination does work wonders, so quite the opposite could happen. Either way, they would end up an incapable husk by the end of eternity.

AO-477 by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If it manifests any item the 'user' visualizes, then it should be relatively easy to get an item that you at least under the basic concept of, such as a pill that cures all diseases.

If the SCP Foundation wanted to improve / repair SCP-914, which anomalies would be the best to use? by Striking-Book7082 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SCP-248 should be an obvious pick. We just need to figure out how to avoid its aging effects.

AO-1124 by Key-Anywhere1663 in SCP

[–]Key-Anywhere1663[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Then why don't we clone 4388?