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“ | Amongst a web of life, I am a dying prisoner in a shell of clay. I am a single object, doomed without purpose, without any source of respite. To subsist as I do now is to die a death more potent than that suffered by mortals: I can only dream of having the vitality they take for granted. No-one takes responsibility for my actions save myself, and even I am unable to speak out against the world. | „ |
~ SCP-173's inner monologue. |
SCP-173 is a supporting antagonist in the SCP Foundation series. It is a statue which can move at a very high speed and can snap the neck of any life form.
It is perhaps the most famous SCP of all time and the first one ever written. It is also the main antagonist of SCP - Containment Breach and a playable character in SCP: Secret Laboratory.
Biography[]
“ | There was a legend about the Koitern. It was said that he would not kill you so long as you met his gaze. That some force of mutual defiance stayed the hand of death. Most disregarded the legend. Few tried it, and they found it to be true. Unfortunately, no one could meet his eyes forever. What no one knew was that the reverse of this effect was also true; the Koitern would not kill any who met his gaze, but none whose gaze he met could kill him. | „ |
~ "This Is How the World Ends" on SCP-173. |
This monster's origin is as of yet unknown. It is made of concrete and rebar with traces of Krylon brand spray paint. SCP-173 is extremely hostile and animate. It cannot move while viewed directly and must not be broken. Personnel at a minimum of three are assigned to enter the container and are to alert one another before blinking. It is reported to kill its victims by snapping the neck of any human it encounters.
Personnel report sounds of scraping stone within the container when no one is inside. The reddish-brown substance on the floor is a combination of feces and blood. The origin of these materials is unknown but must be cleaned on a bi-weekly basis.
SCP-173 in order from being prevented from escaping must be kept in a locked container at all times. When personnel enter SCP-173's container, three at the minimum may enter at any time and the door is to be relocked behind them. At all times, two persons must maintain direct eye contact with SCP-173, while the third person cleans the container until all personnel leaves and relocked the container.
In Video Games[]
SCP - Containment Breach[]
SCP-173 is the first SCP object that the player encounters, and is the main antagonist of the game. After the guards bring the player along with two other Class-D test subjects into SCP-173's containment, they shut the door behind them and instruct one of them to clean and the rest to make eye contact with SCP-173. Due to a massive power outage and site-wide containment breach, the door opens unexpectedly. The instructor orders them to remain in direct eye contact with SCP-173 until they can repair the door, before the rest of the facility has a blackout, thus breaking eye contact with the Class-D and SCP-173, who quickly kills the two Class-D until escaping its chamber, killing the security guard up on top of the balcony, and escaping into a large ventilation system.
After the containment breach, SCP-173 appears in a room, next to his containment chamber. A guard and a scientist, see it, and maintain eye contact, and slowly back out of the room. Also in another room, as soon as the lights in the room blackout, SCP-173 drops down from a large vent and kills a scientist and a janitor who were attempting to escape.
Throughout the game, SCP-173 will follow and attempt to snap the player's neck. Unless the player blinks or looks away from it, SCP-173 cannot move. If the player blinks or looks away, SCP-173 will either move significantly closer to them or open any doors that are blocking its way if it can.
SCP-173 often appears in locker rooms, catwalks filled with decontamination gas which would cause the player to blink at a rapid pace, the small control room, sometimes in the metal corridors, and later on, the electrical room, along with SCP-106. Because SCP-173 uses the ventilation system to travel, most of its spawn locations will have a broken vent.
If the MTF operatives encounter SCP-173, they will proceed to contain it again, completely ignoring the player if present. The operatives will then use a large cage to capture SCP-173 and return it to its containment chamber.
SCP: Secret Laboratory[]
SCP-173 serves as a playable character in the game. SCP-173's has the unique ability to move and instantly kill human players (by left-clicking on them) whenever no one looks at it (Other SCPs do not halt SCP-173 when viewing it). However, while being viewed, it cannot move. Human players viewing SCP-173 will start blinking at regular intervals and depending on how many are viewing it at one time, it will move forward as people blink.
SCP - Containment Breach (Unity Remake)[]
Just as the original game, SCP-173 is slightly much faster than blinking for a second. As of now, SCP-173 does not have a death-screen once murdering the player.
In Online Series[]
SCP: Sedition[]
“ | Breaks everything it touches. If my mother were around - that is to say if I had a mother - she'd say we were a lot alike. Well... despite the lack of a face. | „ |
~ SCP-035 speaking of SCP-173. |
In this non-canon, fan-made series, SCP-173 doesn't appear in the series at first, but is spoken of by many other SCPs in their respective interviews. There is something of a recurring theme between other SCP's being puzzled by SCP-173's existence, or even hating him.
SCP-079 openly despises SCP-173 due to the Foundation placing SCP-173 into SCP-682's containment chamber in an attempt to kill the latter. This attempt to permanently terminate SCP-682 had failed, though it left him gravely injured, from which it recovered.
In an experimental video about SCP-978 (known as "The Desire Camera"), an employee of the Foundation named Isaac "Watch" Watchthorne uses the camera to photograph many SCPs around the facility. The one Watch takes of SCP-173 shows a photograph with no change whatsoever, revealing that the SCP wants to remain exactly as it is. This is the first time the SCP appears in the series, only being mentioned in previous videos.
In Music[]
SCP-173 appears in a song on the internet called the SCP-173 song created by Mobius, it is a song based around SCP-173 and was released on June 19, 2012, and has gained 3,154,367 views today.
In Board Games[]
Uncontained[]
SCP-173 is included as a dangerous anomaly card that is capable of moving from player to player in the SCP board game Uncontained.
Escape from Site 19[]
In Escape from Site 19, the chosen player will draw the card of SCP-173.
Trivia[]
- In addition to being the first SCP ever caught, SCP-173 was also the first one ever created. It was created on June 22nd 2007 by 4chan user Moto42, also known as S.S. Walrus.
- Walrus created this as a random post to spook some people on a message board whilst trying to subvert the usual "jump-scare/creepy photo" trend associated with bad creepy-pastas. People latched onto the idea as a new type of creepy-pasta due to the actual scientific style of writing however and it exploded from there. By January 2008, between the 17th and 19th, a new message board specially for SCPs was created and more SCPs including SCP-882, SCP-106, and SCP-096.
- The initial post was made on the "/x/ Paranormal" message boards (also known for spawning Ted the Caver and The Holders series, the latter of which having a slightly similar premise) and the post laid out the basic description of 173 used above. Its description and containment procedures have not really changed since that initial message post. By July 2008, the website specifically about SCPs was established and it exploded from there.
- As stated in the description, SCP-173 was the first SCP ever caught. The second was SCP-882 (although most people thought it was 682).
- Despite being the first SCP ever caught by the Foundation, it is the 173rd. The explanation in universe is that SCP's are not labeled linearly, but randomly assigned numbers usually ranging from 2-10000
- From a meta point of view, the reason is because S.S. Walrus intended it to be a one-off post on a message board and didn't expect it to go anywhere so didn't really consider the numbering.
- SCP-173 is based on a real-life sculpture named Untitled 2004, created by the Japanese sculptor and artist Izumi Kato. The sculpture was made out of wood, acrylic, and charcoal.
- SCP-173 photo used on the Villains wiki, was created by Denis Skiba.
- SCP-173 was the first SCP object ever found, single-handedly responsible for the creation of the SCP Foundation Wiki which houses multiple other supernatural objects and beings.
- Despite being a Euclid class anomaly, SCP-173's presence has greatly unsettled SCP-682 (one of the most dangerous and powerful entities in the multiverse) while the two were in the same chamber during an experiment. During this time, SCP-682 grew several more eyes to never break contact from SCP-173. When SCP-187, a girl who can see the future of objects and people she looks at and was used to seeing death and catastrophes, saw SCP-173 she screamed for a period of time before falling unconscious and slipping in state of catatonia for forty-eight hours before awakening, but couldn't remember what she saw. This implies that SCP-173 might be even more dangerous than thought before.
- There exists a "revised entry" of SCP-173, which is actually a tale. In it, the creature shows its capability to reproduce asexually through the substance it produced. After numerous reproductions, to the point where there becomes at very least one-hundred and fifty copies of SCP-173, the Foundation nukes North and South America, before bombing Wales to eliminate the last of the SCP-173s.
- In the tale, "Date Night", Dr. Clef, a researcher of the Foundation with powerful reality warping powers, went on "date" with SCP-173 on Friday night. He put SCP-173 in front of a table inside a beautiful suite and dressed SCP-173 with a black dress and a blonde wig, while five tired D-Class kept their sight on SCP-173 as the date went on, with Clef admiring SCP-173's appearance.
- Ironically in the "Classical Revival" continuity, Francis (Clef's real name) was terrified by 173 when they first discovered it.
- During an occasional clean-up of 173's cell, SCP-131 came inside its cell and seeing that the statue posed a threat to the D-Class cleaning the cell, the Eye-Pod stared at the statue leaving the three D-Class to clean the cell without any concern. This prompted the Foundation to formulate new procedures utilizing 131.
- In the tale, "Anniversary", the invisible creator of SCP-173 and other anomalous statues enters the containment of SCP-173 to visit his creation, telling it that it is his favorite, killing those who don't give it attention. This could mean that SCP-173 is looking for attention and kills those who don't give it. In another tale, "RE: The Sculpture", a junior researcher asks Dr. Bright for permission in testing alternative ways of cleaning SCP-173's containment. They all failed due to SCP-173 continually changing the composite that it releases, and Dr. Bright denied to the junior researcher the permission of terminating SCP-173, stating that they can still learn from it. Dr. Bright then states to the O5 council that for whatever reason, SCP-173 wants actual people to clean its containment unit, supporting the idea that SCP-173 wants only attention.
- It is implied that the creator of SCP-173 was a member of Are We Cool Yet?, an international community of artists who create anomalous paintings and sculptures, and often come into conflict with the SCP Foundation.
- This SCP entity is similar to SCP-650, since they are both able to move quickly when not observed. SCP-650 is not entirely hostile, however, as it only intends to startle people instead of actually killing them.
- In SCP-5555, it is revealed that the Administrator of the Foundation, and other leaders of the other GOIs are actually powerful immortal beings who use the SCP universe and its inhabitants as just a playboard game with roleplaying for their own entertainment, and after one of them wins, the game starts over and the universe resets, but with the with major differences, such as SCP-173 being a D-Class man in the previous game before becoming a bloodthirsty living statue in the current one.
- When the Foundation used SCP-978, a camera that when takes a picture of someone the photo it produces shows the individual's biggest desire, to take a photo of SCP-173, the picture did not change, possibly meaning that it is not alive, or it wishes nothing.
- In an attempt to kill SCP-682, it was proposed to put a photo of SCP-096 on SCP-173, which was immediately denied by the O5 Council due to the catastrophe that could cause such combination.
- In her author page Fanthem assigned SCP-173 the song "Rhinestone Eyes" by The Gorillaz.
- In the universe of SCP-6001 where the Compendium, a benevolent amalgam organization of different GoIs, took over the world and declared worldwide peace with all anomalies, SCP-173 is the center of attention at an art museum in an amphitheater where people all around the world come to see it as it changes into something new at the stroke of midnight.
- In SCP-3220 the Foundation discovers a facility built by a precursor organization which features hundreds of similar statues. The facility resembles a panopticon and the central tower contained a single corpse with a broken neck which links to 173's article.
Copyright Notice[]
- The image used in the SCP-173 article is the art piece "Untitled 2004" by Izumi Kato. The photograph was taken by Keisuke Yamamoto. All rights are reserved by the artists.
- According to the SCP Wiki's entry, SCP-173 is a secondary use of the image of the art piece "Untitled 2004", which was created by Izumi Kato. The concept of SCP-173 does not have any relationship with the artist's original concept of "Untitled 2004".
- The sculpture, its likeness, and the photograph have not been released under any Creative Commons license. Only the text of the author on the original wiki are released under Creative Commons. This sculpture and its likeness may not be used for commercial purposes under any circumstances. Izumi Kato has graciously chosen to allow the use of the image of "Untitled 2004" by the SCP Foundation and its fanbase for non-commercial purposes only.
- DO NOT contact or negotiate Izumi Kato about anything related to "SCP-173".
- DO NOT negotiate "commercial license of SCP-173 images" at all.
- DO NOT ask the SCP Wiki to handle "untitled 2004 commercial license negotiations" with Izumi Kato.
- "Untitled 2004" images are not available commercially for use in connection with SCP-173. THERE IS NO EXCEPTION.
External Links[]
- SCP-173 on the SCP Foundation Wiki
- SCP-173 on the SCP Meta Wiki
- SCP-173 on the SCP - Containment Breach Wiki
- SCP-173 on the Creepypasta Universe Wiki (even if he isn't a creepypasta or isn't a creepypasta anymore, the owner of wiki wants it to stay because it originated from an anonymous post on a creepypasta forum on 4chan)
- SCP-173 on the SCP: Unity Wiki
- SCP-173 (old) on the SCP: Unity Wiki
- SCP-173 on the SCP: Secret Laboratory Wiki
- SCP-173 on the SCP Database Wiki
- SCP-173 on the SCP Database
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