Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2014 horror comedy novel Horrorstör is set in a haunted store called ORSK, modelled on IKEA, and the novel is designed to look like the IKEA catalogue. [272] The SCP Foundation, an online collaborative horror writing community documenting fictional anomalies, features an entry (numbered SCP-3008) originating in 2017 about an IKEA store ...
3008 is an open-world horror game where players navigate an "infinite IKEA" filled with supplies, either to make a base or as food, as well as hostile IKEA employees that attack players at night. [143] [144] It is based on SCP-3008, which is from the SCP Foundation universe. [145]
SCP-3008 is an abandoned IKEA store, with an interior containing a seemingly infinite, labyrinthine pocket dimension. Prospective customers that have become trapped within the endless building make rudimentary fortifications to defend against the store's inhabitants: tall faceless humanoid creatures wearing IKEA employee uniforms that become ...
3008 Docklands Magazine, an Australian magazine; Louisiana State Highway 3008, a highway in Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States; MP 3008, a World War II German substitute standard submachine gun; SCP-3008, a fictional infinite IKEA retail space
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Interogo Foundation was founded on 29 March 1989 in Vaduz, Liechtenstein. Its aim is to secure the longevity and independence of the IKEA concept and the continued existence of Inter IKEA Holding, as well as to influence the leadership of the company. [2] [7] The IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad and his family used to control Interogo Foundation ...
The French branch of IKEA went on trial on 22 March 2021, for running an elaborate system to spy on staff members and job applicants by illegally using private detectives and police officers. [17] On 15 June 2021, IKEA France was found guilty of spying and ordered to pay €1.1m in fines and damages for these illegal practices.