Finally, the Survival Logbook excels in its artistic delivery of dread. The "best" pages are those where the innocent activity format is subverted by the supernatural. A standard "design your own Freddy" activity becomes a disturbing canvas for the spirit to draw a grave. A "draw your favorite animal" prompt is answered with a sketch of a crying child. This juxtaposition of childhood innocence and supernatural horror is the core aesthetic of the FNAF franchise, and the book executes it flawlessly. It forces the reader to look closer, to decode the messages hidden in the static, mirroring the gameplay mechanic of watching the security cameras.
"Does he still talk to you?" next to a drawing of the Psychic Friend Fredbear plush. fnaf survival logbook all pages best