- 4,191
- 2,229
Okay, so Amanda the Adventurer got a calc accepted. Okay, so see this?
Get this, High 8-C+!: https://vsbattles.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Flashlight237/Amanda_the_Adventurer:_The_Buildings_Are_Dead!
This was from Amanda melting buildings, killing them. This holds consistency with, well, Amanda earlier trying to take out the Butcher Shops in a game of Hakai Whack-a-Mole. She's significantly stronger than past indie horror game villains (Freddy Fazbear, the Neighbor, Bendy, etc), like damn! It's flipping crazy..!
She had did other things, like snapping Woolie's leg (Street level+, due to the leg being snapped perpendicularly) and, in her demon form, slamming an attic door open and basically FNaF-ing Riley. There's also mutilating Woolie prior to the "Good" ending, but I dunno how mutilation's supposed to work in the context of this site's tiering system in general.
There had been some dissention asserting that the show is just lines of code... First of all, how inept are you in the technologies of the past? VHS tapes (invented in 1976, with similar technologies dating into the 1950s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHS ) and CRT television sets (1954 for the first color CRTs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathode-ray_tube ) were technologies made when TVs and home media had nothing to do with programming in that context, and DVDs (invented in 1996 and actually have something to do with programming), which were made when Amanda the Adventurer was in production (late 90s-early 2000s) did not completely phase out VHS until 2005 or 2006. You even screw with Amanda and Woolie with an oven that very much isn't a Samsung Smart Fridge. You're very much using media that had nothing to do with coding to interact with the show.
Second of all, Amanda and Woolie were both shown to be autonomous like us humans are. You really can't code autonomy regardless of what AI "artists" and people using ChatGPT tell you.
Thirdly, it was shown in plenty of instances that Amanda and the show is tethered to the real world in some shape or form. I'll go for the explicit bits first before getting to the implicit bits. In the normal route where you basically give all the correct answers to Amanda, no off-beaten paths, Amanda says that sometimes she can feel herself rotting when educating Riley, the viewer, about decomposition. In the "Good Ending," after you let Amanda share a secret with you, she tells you that she's "out there somewhere" before the TV goes Exorcist mode decides that trying to mate with Missingno is a good idea. By "out there," she means reality. Oh, and in one ending, the attic door winds up taking you to the very butcher shop Amanda went apeshit in and melted down. Yes, you very physically enter the show's butcher shop through the attic door like some pocket dimension nonsense in one ending, no code needed (not that Riley could even do C++ as far as I'm aware). We usually tier pocket dimensions based on what all is in there, btw.
This next one sits in the middle ground between explicit and implicit. In one of the secret tapes, we hear the crew at Hameln forcing Rebecca through a physical recording session, much to Sam's despair. That part is explicit, although implicitly, one can say that through this recording session, Hameln is merging Rebecca with the show or at the very least the demon Amanda turns into. Lastly, this one's very implicit, but in the worst ending in the game, you watch as Amanda goes full on apeshit as she turns into the demon that bursts through the alley door later on. The sticker you get for that ending, a sad Amanda, implies that the kitten Amanda hellbentedly implored you to save symbolically represents Rebecca herself.
That's 3 or 4 endings and one secret tape showing a straight-up connection between the show and reality. Here are the endings, btw.:
So yeah, there you have it: a nice, lovely upgrade for Amanda. Whew!
Oh, and Amanda should get Existence Erasure. Here, if you purposely ignore Amanda's question in the Everything Rots tape, she outright erases Woolie from existence:
Just pointing that out.
Get this, High 8-C+!: https://vsbattles.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:Flashlight237/Amanda_the_Adventurer:_The_Buildings_Are_Dead!
This was from Amanda melting buildings, killing them. This holds consistency with, well, Amanda earlier trying to take out the Butcher Shops in a game of Hakai Whack-a-Mole. She's significantly stronger than past indie horror game villains (Freddy Fazbear, the Neighbor, Bendy, etc), like damn! It's flipping crazy..!
She had did other things, like snapping Woolie's leg (Street level+, due to the leg being snapped perpendicularly) and, in her demon form, slamming an attic door open and basically FNaF-ing Riley. There's also mutilating Woolie prior to the "Good" ending, but I dunno how mutilation's supposed to work in the context of this site's tiering system in general.
There had been some dissention asserting that the show is just lines of code... First of all, how inept are you in the technologies of the past? VHS tapes (invented in 1976, with similar technologies dating into the 1950s https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHS ) and CRT television sets (1954 for the first color CRTs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathode-ray_tube ) were technologies made when TVs and home media had nothing to do with programming in that context, and DVDs (invented in 1996 and actually have something to do with programming), which were made when Amanda the Adventurer was in production (late 90s-early 2000s) did not completely phase out VHS until 2005 or 2006. You even screw with Amanda and Woolie with an oven that very much isn't a Samsung Smart Fridge. You're very much using media that had nothing to do with coding to interact with the show.
Second of all, Amanda and Woolie were both shown to be autonomous like us humans are. You really can't code autonomy regardless of what AI "artists" and people using ChatGPT tell you.
Thirdly, it was shown in plenty of instances that Amanda and the show is tethered to the real world in some shape or form. I'll go for the explicit bits first before getting to the implicit bits. In the normal route where you basically give all the correct answers to Amanda, no off-beaten paths, Amanda says that sometimes she can feel herself rotting when educating Riley, the viewer, about decomposition. In the "Good Ending," after you let Amanda share a secret with you, she tells you that she's "out there somewhere" before the TV goes Exorcist mode decides that trying to mate with Missingno is a good idea. By "out there," she means reality. Oh, and in one ending, the attic door winds up taking you to the very butcher shop Amanda went apeshit in and melted down. Yes, you very physically enter the show's butcher shop through the attic door like some pocket dimension nonsense in one ending, no code needed (not that Riley could even do C++ as far as I'm aware). We usually tier pocket dimensions based on what all is in there, btw.
This next one sits in the middle ground between explicit and implicit. In one of the secret tapes, we hear the crew at Hameln forcing Rebecca through a physical recording session, much to Sam's despair. That part is explicit, although implicitly, one can say that through this recording session, Hameln is merging Rebecca with the show or at the very least the demon Amanda turns into. Lastly, this one's very implicit, but in the worst ending in the game, you watch as Amanda goes full on apeshit as she turns into the demon that bursts through the alley door later on. The sticker you get for that ending, a sad Amanda, implies that the kitten Amanda hellbentedly implored you to save symbolically represents Rebecca herself.
That's 3 or 4 endings and one secret tape showing a straight-up connection between the show and reality. Here are the endings, btw.:
So yeah, there you have it: a nice, lovely upgrade for Amanda. Whew!
Oh, and Amanda should get Existence Erasure. Here, if you purposely ignore Amanda's question in the Everything Rots tape, she outright erases Woolie from existence:
Just pointing that out.
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