Petite Souricière

From Screamer Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search

Template:Epilepsy

Petite Souricière (French for "Little Mousetrap") is a French scratch game made by Gamerscratch2 on December 6th, 2016. The game itself is similar to The Maze with a couple differences such as using the arrow keys to move rather than the mouse as with most clones of Jeremy Winterrowd's iconic game.

Overview

After clicking on the green flag button, the player is presented with a stock image of a ventriloquist puppet holding up his sharp, wooden index finger up to his mouth (in the shush gesture). At the same time, a stock horror music tune is audibly heard playing in the background (with the beginning portion sounding similar to The Exorcist Theme). On the top right corner are two buttons: One button says "JOUER" ("Play" in French) and the other says "INSTRUCTIONS." Once the player hits the play button, the game immediately begins.

Unlike most copy-cats of The Maze, the player controls a tiny brown mouse with the arrow keys (strangely enough, pressing WASD does not move the mouse at all). The layout of the level is relatively small with the borders being mustard-yellow walls on top of a stock image of a vampire's mouth with blood dripping from its tongue. Meanwhile, there is a stock song playing that sounds like your typical labyrinth music.

As expected, the goal is to reach the end of the labyrinth without touching the walls (the goal is colored red and is detached from the yellow walls). Failure to do so will cause a flashing picture of Regan MacNeil from The Exorcist to pop up accompanied with the same screaming sound from The Maze. Even if the player tries to reach the end without contacting the borders of the maze, the game will teleport the player back to the start by the time they reach the point in the map where they are on the vampire's mouth. This happens so that the player unsuspectingly hits the wall at the beginning so that they can get jumpscared either way.

Link

NOTE: The following game contains a screamer!

  • scratch.mit.edu/projects/134618390/

Comments

Comments

Loading comments...