Tag Archives: FNAF 4

The Duck Dreams About Being Pursued by Ennard from FNAF

I’ve been playing FNAF: Ultimate Custom Night lately, which spawned a dream the night of May 20, 2025.  I was in this place that was a mix of the UCN office and FNAF 4.  You know how, in FNAF 4, there is a bedroom with a hallway on either side?  And then, there must be some room we never see at the end of those two hallways.  Well, the UCN office was on the other end of the house where the two hallways meet up, if that makes sense.  I was doing my best to keep the animatronics out, but Ennard crawled out of the vent into the office.  So I started running down the hallway, and Ennard followed casually along behind, in no hurry to catch up.  I was going to run into the bedroom at the end of the hallway and lock the door, but I knew it wouldn’t matter because Ennard could easily break down the door.

I barely remember my death, but I know I died in some way, only to respawn in the office.  And so the night began again, and I had to fend off animatronics once more.  Somehow, people were watching me, as if this was merely some sort of game and not a life-or-death situation.  I yelled at the people to be quiet, as they were talking loudly and making it hard for me to hear if anything was in the vent.  The dream, fortunately, ended before any more animatronics got in my office, but I won’t soon forget being slowly pursued by the horrifying tangle of wires known as Ennard, so casual about his chase because he knew his victory was guaranteed.  Shudder…

FNAF Ultimate Custom Night Playthrough on Virtual Bastion

FNAF Ultimate Custom Night has us squaring off against a grand total of 50 animatronics spread across the first 6 FNAF games.  This no-commentary series has the Duck earning high scores in roughly 700-point intervals so that we can unlock the various Bear of Vengeance and Toy Chica: The High School Years cutscenes.

Video from YouTube User: Virtual Bastion

FNAF 1-4: A Comparison

For the longest time, the only original Scott Cawthon-created Five Nights at Freddy’s games I owned were the first two.  This was largely due to the fact that these games were originally only available on the PC, and I’m more of a console gamer.  Nevertheless, I still tried the first two games for myself, then proceeded to watch people play FNAF 3-6 on Youtube.  But at long last, I managed to get my hands on the FNAF Core Collection on the PS4 (which was $14 instead of the usual $40), which includes the first five games.  Deciding to record the first four for October, I’d like to quickly recount my experiences and compare the games now that I finally have some first-hand experience with them.

Continue reading FNAF 1-4: A Comparison