Furries.exe: Difference between revisions

m
Fixes
imported>Zaenon
(Adding to the story, obviously.)
imported>Zaenon
m (Fixes)
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Instead of a reply as I expected, they started chasing me. I tried to run from them, but they are faster than me. They eventually caught up to me and attempted to kill me, yet I knew nothing would truly happen as the real entity never deliberately killed. As she stabbed me, I was screaming in agony. I later died but only temporarily, because the real entity never killed anybody.
 
I, not as Zelona, woke up after that event. I decide to restart the computer as it ran into a kernel panic for a while. I don't know how long I was taking Zelona's body but it doesn't matter to me either. After the computer booted up again, I noticed that the furries.exe folder was still there. What else I noticed though, was that the background picture was the Borromean Neopagan pentagrams. From what I know, there is no Linux software I know about that changes the background picture. I opened the furries.exe folder. Everything was still there, but there was a new file named options.ini. This was a configuration file that I never noticed before. It may be used by the game and removing it may cause mythe progressgame to resetbecome unplayable. I decided not to even open it unless I had a reason to do so.
 
I ran the game, and this time Zelona was in the barren wasteland that was once a city. She noticed the same symbol immediately this time―the Borromean Neopagan pentagrams. Something was different with this from the rest―it was basically a two-dimensional shape on the floor, rather than the impossible three-dimensional shape. I don't know what caused this change, but it doesn't matter. Zelona also noticed the rabbit. Zelona asked them "Is there a way to get rid of them?" The rabbit replied "While there are many ways, the easiest was is for me to be killed. If I'm killed, you may have a chance to kill them without a problem."
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I asked myself "What is the options.ini file for?"
 
Breaking the fourth wall, the rabbit replied "The options.ini file is basicalybasically self-explanatory―it stores the settings."
 
"Should I manually modify it?"
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