F ":" A group of teenage hooligans enters Freddy's place. Chaos breaks out. " - Dismissed for some strange decisions that led to an end with a "factory that designs robots for the government."
"Plushies Take Manhattan": "The stuffed animals take the city of Manhattan." - Discarded for that very reason.
"Random Charlie": "Charlie and his friends sneak into Freddy's after hours to retrieve a lost toy." - Dismissed because, although it took characters from books and games, the connections are too vague.
"Silver Eyes": a work by Kira and Cawthon himself to try to adapt the story of the first book to the big screen. - Dismissed due to difficulties in adapting the books and lack of experience, in addition to preferring to adapt the story of the games.
“Pawn Shop”: “A boy who watches over a pawn shop runs into problems when they bring an animatronic [Freddy] (…). The other animatronics return to retrieve it, then the boy and his friends are involved in an adventure. " - Dismissed for losing the touch of terror sought.
"Cassidy": "Going deeper, this script has a lot of lore following Cassidy's story." - Discarded due to too much saturation. Too many characters, too many jumps in time.
“Misfit Kid”: “A single mother moves with her son to a new city. The boy runs into Freddy's place. There is comedy. " - Although it is not a bad setting, it did not work. Discarded because, if Cawthon wasn't even interested in the characters, how would the viewer be interested?
"Ghost Trackers": "A group of amateur ghost hunters sneak into Freddy's abandoned premises." - Too much focus on the characters and their stories, rather than everything that involves Freddy.
"Insane": "Another variant of the ghost hunters, involving the Funtime Animatronics, underground ball tunnels, and a Marionette seeking revenge!" - Dismissed for having too much action.
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