Item Number: SCP-3934
Object Class: Euclid
Special Containment Procedures: SCP-3934 is currently impossible to contain, however, it does not move very far from the point at which it was discovered. Therefore, SCP-3934 must have a 1km exclusion zone around it at all times, as well as a 100m deadzone. If SCP-3934 ever exits the designated deadzone, a lockdown must occur in the 1km exclusion zone and the 1.5km temporary exclusion zone must be enacted for however long SCP-3934 is outside of the deadzone plus an extra ten minutes in case of SCP-3934 leaving the deadzone again (see Addendum 3934/1 for more details). No human, including foundation personnel, is allowed to enter the exclusion zone without written permission from at least two (2) lever four (4) research personnel. Any foundation employee who enters the exclusion zone with sufficient permission is to be accompanied by two (2) level three (3) guards armed with electromagnetic pulse guns and one HID turret mounted on a motorized vehicle to be used in case of extreme emergencies only. Five (5) level three (3) armed guards must also be stationed at the one entrance to the exclusion zone to prevent humans who did not heed the warning signs from entering the exclusion zone. Any human, including foundation personnel, who enters the exclusion zone will be subject to disciplinary action as well as possible termination. Any human exhibiting signs of SCP-3934's anomalous effects will be terminated the instant they are observed exhibiting these effects.
Description: SCP-3934 is a sentient 3D model of a music note, most often observed as an eighth note. SCP-3934 is capable of movement via floating through the air, although it prefers not to move very far. SCP-3934's anomalous effects manifest when a human enters a range 1km away from SCP-3934's current location, give or take 100m. These effects occur randomly whenever a human is in the range, but usually equate to, as described by Class-D Personnel, "a splitting headache caused by an extremely loud song and bright light creating a fading effect at the edges of the eyesight." Whatever song is playing varies between individual subjects, but the most common ones seem to be [DATA EXPUNGED], common among Hispanic subjects, and [DATA EXPUNGED], nearly always heard by American subjects.






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