--------------------------- Out Of Order rules --------------------------- Good morning, {REDACTED}. If you are reading this note, then you have already passed the security evaluation. Your employment has been approved. What you experienced was not a test of strength, intelligence, or experience. It was a measure of how you respond when instructions conflict, when fear creeps in, and when turning back feels like the safer choice. You likely felt watched. You likely felt alone. Both reactions were expected. The building you entered was part of the evaluation. The building you work in still is. Although the test is complete, the rules remain in effect. You are expected to understand them exactly as written. Violations will not result in termination so much as… consequences. RULES (You have already read them. Not all rules were meant to be read.) 12. You were instructed to read Rules 1 through 4 only. Do not read Rule 5. Do not acknowledge Rule 6. 1. Do not push on the door. You learned that the door opens when it decides to. Forcing it was recorded. 2. Do not exit. There was no exit prepared for you at the time. Doors marked EXIT were never intended for participants. If you thought you saw a way out, you did the correct thing by looking away and continuing. 3. Do not fight X. You were never hired to confront anything. Resistance causes escalation. You observed that X loses interest when ignored. 4. Do not fail the test. You did not fail. The others did. Failure is permanent. 5. Do not read this rule. If you remember reading it, protocol was already broken. You were expected to continue anyway. ̷6. D̷o̷n̷’̷t̷ ̷f̷i̷g̷h̷t̷ ̷i̷t̷.̷ ̷J̷u̷s̷t̷ ̷l̷e̷t̷ ̷i̷t̷ ̷h̷a̷p̷p̷e̷n̷.̷ ̷I̷t̷ ̷e̷n̷d̷s̷ ̷f̷a̷s̷t̷e̷r̷ ̷t̷h̷a̷t̷ ̷w̷a̷y̷.̷ If the rules seemed to contradict each other, they did not. If the rules seemed to change, they never changed. You simply became aware of them. Remember: it was only a game. The fear was real anyway. Take a breath. You’re already inside. There’s no need to rush. Proceed to your assigned room. Welcome aboard. It’s December the 28th, and your last day of work is January 1st, 2026. Do you have the guts to try? You were not scheduled to last this long. The contract you signed did not include an end date—only an upper threshold. You crossed it sometime last night, though the system did not notify you. Systems rarely announce mistakes they benefit from. Between now and January 1st, the building will behave differently. Hallways may shorten. Rooms may repeat. People you recognize may insist you’ve never met. This is not retaliation. It is preparation. Each remaining day serves a purpose: December 28 is for orientation you don’t remember receiving. December 29 is for correcting errors that were never yours. December 30 is for containment. December 31 is for observation. January 1st is not a workday. January 1st is a decision. You may notice files labeled with your name appearing on desks you haven’t visited. Do not open them. They are drafts. The final version is not complete yet. Sleep is optional but discouraged. Dreams interfere with surveillance. If you wake up somewhere unfamiliar, assume you were moved for your own safety. Do not make plans after midnight on the 31st. Do not tell anyone where you work. Do not ask what happens to those who stayed past their last day. You already know the answer. That’s why you’re still here. If you choose to leave early, the doors will allow it. If you choose to stay, the doors will remember. The building is patient. It has waited longer than you. So ask yourself carefully: On January 1st, when the lights don’t turn on automatically, when the rules stop updating, when no one is watching anymore— do you walk out or do you finally see what’s been keeping you inside? Clock in... !@!!@ @!@@! Press space to open/close the door Press s to skip lines that dariocaballero1 took a while to make.
You: “Okay… it’s recording. I know I’m technically not required to do this anymore, but I figured I should keep documenting things. Old habit, I guess. First day habits die hard. For the record: yes, I was officially hired. Full clearance. Badge and everything. Still no real job title—just ‘security.’ That hasn’t changed. I keep thinking about how it started, though. How they didn’t explain anything at first. Just an address. A building. A list of rules. At the time, I thought it was dramatic. I remember laughing at the door rule—‘don’t push, it’s fragile.’ I thought it was just old architecture or some kind of personality test. It wasn’t. The building was empty when I walked in. At least, I believed it was. Now I know better. Empty doesn’t mean unoccupied. They told me that afterward. Like it was obvious. And the rule about not leaving… they say it wasn’t about trapping anyone. It was about commitment. About whether you’d keep going once you realized walking away felt like the right choice. I still don’t like how that sounds. There was one rule I couldn’t stop thinking about. ‘Don’t fight X.’ No explanation. No definition. I tried to rationalize it—some system issue, a code name, maybe a drill scenario. They never corrected me. I understand it now. Or at least, I understand why they didn’t explain it. I remember standing in front of that door. It wasn’t locked. It never was. I remember hesitating, remembering the rules, telling myself I was already doing well just by following them. Something changed the moment it opened. I didn’t notice it right away. You never do. Anyway… if anyone ever finds this recording later, I guess this is proof I passed. The test ended. The job didn’t. I’m heading back inside now. Assigned the room this time. If the video cuts out… it doesn’t mean I failed. It just means I stopped recording.” Night 1: You’re safe for now. X isn’t here yet. You might even start to relax, maybe think this job isn’t as bad as they made it sound. Don’t get comfortable. This is just the quiet they give you before anything matters. Night 2: X is here. You’ll know. It hasn’t been upgraded yet, so don’t panic. It’s watching, learning how you move, how you react. As long as you don’t provoke it, you’ll make it through the night. Just remember what the rules said—ignore it. Night 3: They upgraded X. I know, they told you it would be fine. It still looks like X, but it doesn’t behave the same anymore. The tricks that worked last night won’t always work now. If something feels off, that’s because it is. Night 4: Something’s wrong. X isn’t following the rules anymore. You’ll hear it—banging on the doors, testing them, trying to see if it will give. Don’t open it. Don’t respond. If it knows you’re listening, it won’t stop. Night 5: If you’re hearing this… then I waited too long. They were wrong to tell us to stay. You need to leave now. Forget the rules. Forget the job. Get out as fast as you can- ̷N̷̷i̷̷g̷̷h̷̷t̷ ̷5̷: ilmvyl fvb nla rpsslk ulea Jonathan iba pa'z avv shal... Okay, The fUll version (More added to the demo version) took 4 hours total for the demo only, the full game took 5 hours because I forgot to save, like go go Power.1. rangers. But it would have been 4 hours and 30 minutes. But it would just go DOWN.2.. @yykkwwe - main creator @dariocaballero1 - sounds for the phone guy