3/20/2024 0 Comments Fnaf fetch storyEven when the evil aspects come into play, it’s handled with unnecessary “twist obfuscation,” where the prose withholds everything it can to not give away a secret. Yes, the eventual ending is more effecting because of the tragedy inherent to it happening to characters we understand, but the pacing is murdered. Their interactions are cute and interesting and would’ve been fine in a book that wasn’t supposed to be about evil animatronics that murder people. We get an exploration of a teenager that might even be sociopathic and his hated sister bonding before the sister’s birthday party. Instead of an odd tangent, this time it takes forever to introduce the horror aspects. Part 2: “Lonely Freddy.”Īgain, we have a solid premise bogged down by too much preamble. It feels like a page count requirement stretched the length or the author found this book an excuse to explore a pet topic. ![]() Like, yes, I do see the parallels of someone using willpower to cause things to happen and the evil fetching dog, but it distracts from what could’ve been a tighter premise. ![]() The issues come with including metaphysical aspects, which, while an interesting topic to explore, does not match with the evil dog story. Though the eventual outcome is guessable in the abstract, it’s got a good build of dread and a gory, disturbing ending. The core story of a boy that finds a robotic dog that’ll get him anything he asks for, even when he doesn’t mean it, is a great horror premise. Here’s the thing about “Fetch,” it’s got a lot of unnecessary tangents. I think that if this were the first of the Fazbear Frights books, I wouldn’t have done this series. ![]() It’s an interesting case because the stories are wildly uneven in quality. We’re back with another Fazbear Frights review.
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