For decades, Fazbear Entertainment has been a name tied to childhood joy and persistent unease. The company launched multiple family restaurants featuring cheerful singing and dancing animatronics, yet each location eventually closed amid swirling rumors of tragic accidents, health code violations, foul odors emanating from the mascots, and unexplained disappearances of children. Local legends speak of kids vanishing near the colorful characters, animatronics behaving erratically after hours, blood and mucus-like substances around their eyes and mouths, and a dark “curse” that seemed to doom every attempt to keep the brand alive. While authorities never confirmed the wildest stories, the repeated pattern of sudden shutdowns and failed reopenings turned Fazbear into well-known urban folklore. Parents warned their kids, old news clippings circulated, and the company’s name carried an undercurrent of dread no amount of smiling mascot branding could fully erase.
Timeline of Known Fazbear Locations (Public Record)
1983: Fredbear’s Family Diner, the original establishment starring the golden bear Fredbear and his rabbit companion Spring Bonnie. It closed that same year following a highly publicized accident involving one of the springlock suits.
1987: A new Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza location opened with a grand reopening, featuring updated “toy” animatronics. It shut down shortly afterward amid safety concerns and the infamous “Bite of ’87.”
Early 1990s: Another Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza tried to carry on the brand with the classic animatronic cast. Newspapers from the time reported multiple children going missing at the pizzeria bodies never found. One article described two local children reportedly lured into a back room by a man dressed as a company mascot "The Yellow Rabbit". Others noted strange smells, possible blood and mucus around the mascots’ eyes and mouths, and repeated health department sanctions. One piece warned the restaurant was at risk of closure; a follow-up confirmed it would shut its doors by the end of the year as potential buyers distanced themselves from the tainted reputation.
Despite every failure and the growing collection of dark stories, Fazbear Entertainment refused to stay gone for good. Current State – Fazbear’s Fright: The Horror Attraction.
Now, decades later, the company is attempting yet another comeback. A new horror-themed attraction called Fazbear’s Fright is preparing to open to the public. Billed as a thrilling walk-through experience based on the “unsolved mysteries” of the old Freddy Fazbear’s Pizza chain, it proudly displays actual salvaged relics from the defunct restaurants — props, costumes, and animatronic parts meant to evoke childhood memories “in the worst possible way.” A pre-opening newspaper article enthusiastically announced: “Local amusement park is getting ready to scare your socks off with a new attraction… guaranteed to bring back your childhood in the worst possible way!”
You have been hired as the night security guard to monitor the building during its final setup phase before the grand opening. The Building & Security Office Fazbear’s Fright is a single-story, dimly lit maze of winding hallways and storage areas, filled with faded posters, old arcade machines, scattered party-room remnants, and salvaged pizzeria relics. The entire place has a deliberately creepy, abandoned aesthetic designed to heighten the horror experience for future visitors.
The security office is small and cramped, with no physical doors whatsoever nothing to slam shut for protection. The only defensive tools are the vent seals, which can be closed on specific vent camera feeds, and two monitor panels on the desk. One panel controls the 15 cameras (covering hallway paths, an arcade area, and dedicated vent views). The other is the maintenance panel for rebooting failed systems: audio devices, the camera system, or ventilation. A box of old toy animatronic parts sits in the corner, and faint emergency lighting filters in from the halls.