

the very subtle ambience and muffled sounds behind the wooden walls. The sound design is at its best here, with the studio and its very closed-in interior, making you hear random squeaks and distant creaks.
#BENDY AND THE INK MACHINE CHAPTER 5 ALL ENDINGS HOW TO#
Thank you for reading my newest take on the ending of Chapter 5.Rankings in my opinion (Best) Chapter 1: I just love this chapter, its seems so interesting to me, mostly because its how all this started but because it seems to cool to me.Ĭhapter 5: I like this chapter for mostly the fighting, beast bendy, and other reasons I cant think of right now, though there are a few things wrong with it, like the very long beginning cutscene for tom and Allison (possibly cause they didn't introduce them long enough in chapter 4) the ending was.I don't really know how to explain it, but I look pass all these things and still enjoy the chapter.Ĭhapter 4: I like that this chapter gave us a lot like the boss fights pretty much itĬhapter 2: I didnt really find much interest in this chapter, though I did like a few things in it, like when fighting the searchers, or meeting Sammy Lawrence, ect, but its not really the chapter I come back to a lot.Ĭhapter 3: I enjoy this chapter the least, cause I have to do so much fetch quest missions and this chapter always makes my fear and stress rise up cause I never know when the ink demons gonna pop out of nowhere and kill me, especially if Im trying to get the Tommy gun or scythe.Ĭhapter 1: I do like it as an introductory to the game's haunting atmosphere. He just tweaked them to fit the roles we see them have in Bendy and the Ink Machine.

Most, if not all, characters in the game are based off of real life people Joey Drew met and held a relationship with. This Henry is insightful and smart, an adaptation of the real Henry that Joey knew. He writes these things down in invisible ink for later versions of himself to warn himself of the things to come. Most of the time, even the jumpscares are the same. This fictional Henry has been experiencing this loop so many times that he has starts keeping track of all of the constants in the story by writing notes to himself through the seeing tool and saying things like, "I always fall" because at that point in the game he does always fall, or "We always fall" next to the elevators because him and Boris always fall. The real Henry probably has no relationship with Joey, or if he does it's very minimal contact. The Henry we play as is simply a fictional representation of who Henry is/was in Joey's life. The Henry that we know and play as is not the same Henry that was in Joey's life. He seems to brush off all thoughts of talking to the man again. Joey doesnt really say much about him, but of the things he does say he says how he never saw Henry again after that year that he worked at the studio with him. Turning from that note, in the Illusion of Living, Joey makes note of Henry. There are so many hints that none of what that Henry is experiencing is real.

Yes, I understand that this is a fictional game, but there is obviously some factual ideas inside of the fiction. There is obvious harsh work conditions, this is the 1930-60's we're talking about, but there is no such thing as creatures coming to life. There isn't a real possibility of cartoons coming to life, that isn't factual. These stories are adaptations of real life. There are a couple of possibilities, but the leading one is that he is making these stories up of his niece, or nephew. Joey is a masterful storyteller, as we know from his autobiography The Illusion of Living, so he must be making up all of these storyboards for someone. Not by much, but just enough to resemble a phenomenon called folk lore. So, each time Henry goes through a new loop, it changes just a little bit. There are some things that we never experienced like, Sammy Lawrence and Ink Bendy fishing together, or Sammy firing a rifle, similar to the one Henry can get in chapter 3. When looking on Joey's drawing desk, the same or a very similar model as Henry's, it has a multitude of drawings about the game we just finished experiencing. With Joey's monolouge replacing the letter he recieves at the begining of the game, Henry is forced to relive his time in the studio over and over again.īut it must go much deeper than that. Every time he tries to kill Bendy, he somehow ends up back in the same place the story starts the begining of the studio. I, like most, still think that Henry is stuck in a weird time loop. I've still been thinking about the ending of chapter 5 and I have a revamp of my old theory, sort of.
