After concluding that it had no harmfully results, your brain incorporates the effect into a consumer device in which it was mildly usefully and becomes near ubiquitous, and spreads all over the world.
this’d have the makings of a great SCP if not for the obvious problem.
I’d say it would make a better creepypasta than an SCP. Still, if you’re fixed on the SCP genre, I’d try inverting it.
Say the Foundation discovers an SCP which appears to have mind-reading abilities. Nothing too outlandish so far; they deal with this sort of thing all the time. The only slightly odd part is that it’s not totally accurate. Sometimes the thoughts it reads seem to come from an alternate universe, or perhaps the subject’s deep subconscious. It’s only after a considerable amount of testing that they determine the process by which the divergence is caused—and it’s something almost totally innocuous, like going to sleep at an altitude of more than 40,000 feet.
After concluding that it had no harmfully results, your brain incorporates the effect into a consumer device in which it was mildly usefully and becomes near ubiquitous, and spreads all over the world.
this’d have the makings of a great SCP if not for the obvious problem.
I’d say it would make a better creepypasta than an SCP. Still, if you’re fixed on the SCP genre, I’d try inverting it.
Say the Foundation discovers an SCP which appears to have mind-reading abilities. Nothing too outlandish so far; they deal with this sort of thing all the time. The only slightly odd part is that it’s not totally accurate. Sometimes the thoughts it reads seem to come from an alternate universe, or perhaps the subject’s deep subconscious. It’s only after a considerable amount of testing that they determine the process by which the divergence is caused—and it’s something almost totally innocuous, like going to sleep at an altitude of more than 40,000 feet.