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Dreams Come to Life (Bendy and the Ink Machine, book 1): Volume 1

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Sammy is the last main character and is very mysterious and hides things alot.Sammy uses a machine that makes bad inc uses it for many weird things. Bendy and the Ink Machine is a survival horror game that features a mixture of puzzle-solving, environment exploration, and combat to aid Henry on his journey through the darkened halls of Joey Drew Studios. Players explore through a first-person view and have limited physical actions such as running and jumping. Different items can be collected, some of which are required to perform various tasks before proceeding. Cans of Bacon Soup, a reference to the game's creator, theMeatly, and his partner, Mike Mood, can also be collected for achievements and to restore Henry's health if he is injured. I am honestly conflicted by this book. For starters, the book was modestly entertaining to read but seemed to not be a horror novel like it was set to be according to its genre. It fronts as primarily a businessman, Joseph Drew's, memoir of his life and his philosophy, "The Illusion of Living." Nothing spectacular per say as it has a collection of stories from his life and etcetera. The game's tagline " Above all, fear the Machine" seems to be a reference to the first part from one of the Bible verses:

To be completely honest the first 1/3rd of this book had me incredibly hooked and I could only think "Wow, this is different than I expected" However, if you love historical fiction, biographies, or memoirs, then you might enjoy this book. You do not need to play the video game. you don't even have to be a fan of Bendy. If you would read a biography of Walt Disney. You will more than likely enjoy this book. But, it's probably not for you, because you like reading about real people and real events.As a gamer and a reader, I was excited to read this book. I was not expecting some events that is relevant to the video game, Bendy and the Ink Machine. There's actually not much criticism I could say about this book, except that I wanted to know more with a few characters at the end of the book. This wouldn't be the first time I have come across by previous books I read that left a cliffhanger. I'm not saying this book has a cliffhanger at the end, just minor things I wondered about. The other new character, Dot was also a lot of fun and brought a new dynamic to the story, plus I happy to see there wasn’t any romance in the story. Although not what Joey was looking for the sketch makes Joey think, and with input from Joey and Henry's own creative input, Bendy is created. The game was alternatively titled Bendy and the Children of the Machine at one point during production. [4]

Detective Sinclair concludes that Isabel was the murderer, wanting revenge for her brother being left to die, but with no proof or a confession nothing is done and the detective leaves. Seventeen-year-old Buddy has spent most of his life trying to escape the Lower East Side slums of New York City. Working as a delivery boy to support his family, Buddy wants to become an artist, a dream he's sure will never be realized. But that all changes when a delivery job puts him face-to-face with Mister Joey Drew, the eccentric owner of an animation studio. October 25: theMeatly releases their Halloween video for Bendy and the Ink Machine along with a teaser to what Hello Neighbor is doing for Halloween. This book ties into the video game Bendy and the Ink Machine, but not until the second half of the book. It also contributed zero new lore to the game universe and can be read almost entirely on its own.The book's title is a reference to " The Illusion of Life", a Walt Disney animation book written by two long-term animators, Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, who were also two of Disney's Nine Old Men.

It's honestly a minor gripe despite my being long winded in explaining my thoughts on it. But the great part about it is this: Our narrator is confirmed unreliable, he admits he doesn't remember things exactly well and his mind is literally fading away. So if Sammy seems somewhat out of character or events or the way the studio would be seems off to what it would be in game (Some of the stuff with Joey and Tom Conner's work together for example), there's a canon reason as to why. Really brilliant honestly. November 22: The bundle is on Autumn Sale for Steam - Chapter 2 is 50% off and Chapter 3 is 30% off.So who is this book really for? This book is for nerds who played and enjoyed Bendy and the Ink Machine. Nerds who are going to look at the cover and say, "That's the book from the game!" They'll buy it to lovingly display alongside their Bendy plushies and Funko Pops.* Later that afternoon, Brant convinces Mr. Clark to let him write an article for their newspaper, and Brant decides to befriend Bill to write about his father's corruption in Atlantic City. Three weeks later, Detective Sinclair invites Joey to a dinner in Newport at Adelaide Richmond's house, where Mrs. Richmond, Mr. Wadsworth, Everett, Mrs. Pepper, and Isabel Newsome are waiting.

Set in the late 1940’s, Joey Drew provides the vision for his self-named animated film studios. His latest desire is to create Bendy Land, an amusement park based on his popular animated series. Told by Buddy, a 17-year-old gofer at the studio, he and co-worker Dot investigate the strange occurrences happening at the studio, finding he gets in way over his head. The next day, Bill is forced to attend a dinner party with his father, and while he's getting ready an inky figure stalks him, leaving an ink puddle on his floor. I buy books based on their cover so I did no research into the fact that this is NOT a horror story in the slightest. This is a fictional memoir of the man who created the fiction toon "Bendy" I was very excited for this book because I'm a big fan of the game and wanted to see what the studio looked like "in action": how the characters from the games behaved when they were working at the studio and not monsters, how they interacted with each other, what they looked like, etc. So, in that regard, I got exactly what I came for. Although, to be fair, I still don't have a great picture of what the characters really look like, other than what I'd already guessed based off their voices, like Tom being big and Sammy being pointy. Allison caught me by surprise, though.Abby takes Joey to his first salon and Joey decides to write a short play to prove he can do better than those who performed that night. Joey Drew Studios is established in the spring by Joey Drew and Henry Stein in Brooklyn, New York City, New York. However: I do feel that Sammy did feel a little out of character, but I feel like it may have been more because of how he was being read than the book itself. Sammy comes across to me as more of someone who doesn't care much about respecting people and doesn't care who knows it.. The book, or at least the reading, didn't make it seem like that. He also doesn't seem like the type to really.. laugh like the way he does when we first meet him in the book. We've possibly heard him before the ink got him, he just sounds.. much more direct and serious. I think he'd be that in any bigotry he had to. Which sounds like a weird criticism, I know. "Yeah it makes sense he's racist and sexist, but I think he'd be it in this way". In Chapter 3: Rise and Fall, the book is seen laying on one of the desks from the operation room of Level P.

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