Five Nights at Freddy's: The Silver Eyes is a horror story written by Scott Couton and Kira Breed Risley. It is based on the Five Nights at Freddy's horror video game series .
| Five Nights with Freddie: Silver Eyes | |
|---|---|
| Five Nights at Freddy's: The Silver Eyes | |
| Genre | horrors , |
| Author | Scott Cowton , Kira Breed-Risley |
| Original language | English |
| Date of writing | 2015 |
| Date of first publication | 2015 |
| Publisher | CreateSpace |
| Following | |
History
A young teenager Charlotte living in Hurricane in Utah is reunited with her childhood friends on the anniversary of the tragedy that has torn their city. It has been exactly ten years since the killings at Freddy Fazbear's Pizza, and Charlotte, who has been under the name of Charlie for the last ten years, has been trying to forget this. Her father owns Freddy Fazbear's Pizza, built four human animatronic animals and one small animatronic. After meeting with their friends, curiosity leads them back to the old pizzeria, and they find it hidden, but still worthwhile. They find their way inside, but things were not the same as before: the four mascot, who entertained them, changed just like the children. In the animatronic animals there was a dark secret and a murderous agenda. They needed to summon all their wits in order to survive against the onslaught of Freddie Fazber, Bonny Rabbit, Chika Chicken, and Foxy Fox-Pirate.
Prerequisites
December 11, 2015, Scott Cowton posted a teaser on his website, called the Untold Story. In his own words, the story was written "together with a professional writer in the last ten months" and "broadening myths", revealing "the human element that has never been seen in video games." The book was supposed to appear on Amazon Kindle on December 22, but due to an error in the Amazon system, it was released on December 17, 2015. The book appeared in hardcover stores in early 2016. December 15, 2015 Scott revealed the name of the book.
Critic reviews
After receiving a few negative reviews from fans, with complaints about the plot of the book, conflicting with the plot of the game, Coughton wrote the following:
Games and books should be considered as separate continuities, even if they have many similarities. Of course, the book is a canon, as well as video games. This does not mean that they should fit together like two pieces of a puzzle. [...] A book is a re-imagery of Five Nights at Freddy's story, and if you go there with the same attitude, and you will really enjoy it.