Living in Five Nights At Freddy’s 2’s Strange Space Is….

Haunted animatronics, forgotten trauma, and unresolved revenge drive Five Nights at Freddy’s 2, a sequel more interested in changing the game rather than finish it properly.

Five Nights At Freddy’s 2Zoiks, Matthew Lillard is one of those names that can sell a film, and when he’s back as William Afton, the main villain behind the Five Nights at Freddy’s franchise, I hoped for a deeper origin story. In that regard, Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 partially delivers, layering a soft reboot over the existing mythology.

This time, the focus shifts to the spirit of Charlotte (Audrey Lynn Marie), awakened years later. In-universe, the sequel takes place a year after the first film. In the flashback opening, she witnesses the franchise owner preparing to murder an innocent child. No one believes her pleas. When she becomes more than another victim, she locks herself into the same vicious cycle.

The animatronics aren’t just threats, they’re remnants in the truest sense. These ghosts are children trapped between worlds, literally inhabiting machines. Their horror comes from who they’re forced to target. They never asked to be controlled, and over time, their innocence erodes. They become killers.

Once the Withereds are introduced, confusion sets in. They are not the same robots from the first film. Here, they’re framed as “prototypes,” a choice many fans argue effectively deletes the emotional connection built with the original ghosts.

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[Seattle, WA] Sandy’s ACE Comic Con Journal — Was it … ?

ACE Comic Con

By Sandy Sheehan

It seemed like forever for ACE Comic Con Seattle to arrive, but arrive it did. I drove from Spokane, Washington to this city on Friday morning, unaware that my VIP seat assignment was determined by my check-in time rather than by when I purchased the package or stood in line before the panel. It started on Thursday. Needless to say, I was much further back than I thought. VIP seating was also only good for two of the Marvel Entertainment panels.

I am no stranger to conventions and have been to a variety, from Creation Conventions (Star Trek: The Next Generation and more recently Supernatural), city-specific shows such as Mid South Con in Memphis (where I used to live) and more recently Lilac City Comicon (Spokane) and Anglicon (Seattle). I even went to things that would be hard pressed to be called conventions, such as answering phones for the Arkansas PBS station where Jon Pertwee (3rd Doctor from Doctor Who) spoke to the volunteers as well as Paul Darrow (Blake’s 7). ACE was by far the largest one I have attended.

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