Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-26006155-20190131130037/@comment-26006155-20190211164306

Misdirection is a common tactic used in mysteries. Putting pieces together so they think they're talking about the same thing, when they actually aren't.

I know you disagree with me about this, but when I look at the two posters in FNAF 1 that seem to both be talking about the same Missing Children Incident, I notice things that don't add up between them. Like how in one poster a human is clearly identified on the camera, and how in the other a cartoon mascot suit is cause by the camera instead. One incident is about 2 kids, while the other is about 5. Even though we see 5 kids all die at once in Foxy Go Go, with no reason given why 2 would be reported missing first.

Again, even if Kanashi did absorb a human soul, why would this change their appearance to something clearly alien, even by monster terms? King Asgore absorbs the Six Human Souls before Chara-possesed-Frisk arrives, and while he has an incredible number of hit points now, it doesn't turn Asgore into a warped monstrosity.

Absorbing human souls seems to give monsters the power to shapeshift. But it seems like Kanashi was stuck in a distrubing form.

The Waterfall glyphs said "This cursed place has no entraces or exits". And yet in Undertale, there's a skylight that humans can fall though. And there's a path in King Asgore's Castle that leads right to the barrier, and Asriel even used it when he took Chara's body back to her village.

When did this happen?

The glyphs do seem ancient.

Here's the Kanashi section again: https://youtu.be/5IndKnmRM5M?list=PLMBYlcH3smRzDtisspG0VIwJ0oZRakaIF&t=3608

The monster population does seem to be growing over time, so perhaps the ancient calculus of "it would take nearly every monster soul to equal the power of a single human soul" is off now?

Also.. Kanashi's drawing says "It's an illustration of a strange creature. There's something very unsettling about this drawing.

The picture doesn't specifically say the creature is a monster, we just assume that. And assumptions can be dangerous.