DPSMawston
rating: 0+x

A Game You Cant Stop Playing|

SCP-7019

Keter

ANY testing MUST be preformed by mentally ill D-classes or ones that are ready to die during testing. The cartridge MUST NOT be picked up/touched, or even inserted into a games console. Tests must be observed at ALL times. ALL personnel, staff, and D-Classes are to be informed that they should NOT pick up 7019 unless in testing.

SCP-7019 is a small, square, non brand video game with no picture on the front. The cartridge is about 5.25 inches tall, and 4.75 inches wide. The Game was originally made by [REDACTED], A college student who entered a competition for a video game, but on the way there he fell down the stairs and caused various bone fractures and head injuries, which caused a concussion and later, death. The blood that leaked from the crack in his skull got onto the cartridge, which miraculously re-wrote the games code into something more… Supernatural. The game, when touched, will brainwash the tester, forcing them to insert the cartridge into a nearby games console. When opened, the game will be the testers favourite game, or if they don't have one, it will simply be Super Mario Bros for the NES. The game starts off as usual, regular, no glitches, but the closer the tester gets to the end of the game, the stranger the results have been. When the game is about 75% complete, glitches will start to occur, things like random chunks of the game missing, jumbled dialogue, missing textures, etc. But when the game is about 99% finished, incredible glitches and lag are found, and the game becomes almost impossible to beat, showing things like, missing characters, broken physics, enemies spawning more than they should be, harder enemies spawning in low level places, and even the final boss spawning out of nowhere. The game cannot be put down until the game is completed or the character dies, however, losing your life in the game means losing your life in real life. Most D-Classes who have attempted the game have become deceased, but only 3 have finished it, but in doing so, testers have experienced post-psychotic breakthroughs and even extreme trauma. Some have become so ill that they have had to be terminated.