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The sentence "The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents", in Zalgo textZalgo text is generated by excessively adding various diacritical marks in the form of Unicode combining characters to the letters in a string of digital text. [4]
A cursed image refers to a picture (usually a photograph) that is perceived as mysterious or disturbing due to its content, poor quality, or a combination of the two. A cursed image is intended to make a person question the reason for the image's existence in the first place.
A 1999 painting titled I Can’t Be a Bride Anymore by Yuko Tatsushima became attached to the 1919 poem "Tomino's Hell", with claims that the painting was cursed. Tatsushima has stated that most of her paintings are self-portraits , and often incorporate themes of sexual abuse , nuclear holocaust, and borderline personality disorder .
This is a list of objects that are allegedly cursed. The Anguished Man [1] Annabelle (doll) [1] [2] Busby's stoop chair [3] Black Prince's Ruby [citation needed] The Crying Boy [4] The Conjured Chest [citation needed] Dybbuk box [1] Gold of Tolosa – Treasure seized by Roman conquerors of Gaul [5] [6] The Hands Resist Him [3] Hope Diamond [3 ...
Ghouls were originally conceived as "Bloodmen" during the development cycle of the original 1997 Fallout video game. [10] Media such as Forbidden Planet by Fred M. Wilcox and I Am Legend by Richard Matheson, along with real-life accounts of radiation poisoning, were cited as inspirations behind the concept of mutated creatures like ghouls and their exposed flesh for the early Fallout games ...
Banned for discrediting China's national image. The Chinese government claims that the game shows a "cultural invasion". [38] Command & Conquer: Generals: Banned for "smearing the image of China and the Chinese army", although the game presents China as a protagonist and glorifies the People's Liberation Army. [39]
The Vault was founded by Paweł Dembowski [2] and launched on February 7, 2005, initially hosted by Fallout fansite Duck and Cover, [2] as a general source of information about the Fallout universe, initially focusing mostly on information about the Fallout world, as depicted in Fallout and Fallout 2.
Vault Boy is the mascot of the Fallout media franchise. Created by staff at Interplay Entertainment, the original owners of the Fallout intellectual property, Vault Boy was introduced in 1997's Fallout as an advertising character representing Vault-Tec, a fictional megacorporation that built a series of specialized fallout shelters throughout the United States prior to the nuclear holocaust ...