![]() ![]() Intrigued, the child begins to slowly remove the blindfold from his eyes, and then disappears with a scream. When the boy tries to examine it from the outside, a TV turns on behind him, on which the image of the Thin Man appears. Following the sound, the Toddler finds an abandoned shed on a path smeared with blood. Trying to catch his breath after a long run, the Toddler hears a strange scream nearby. The Thin Man appears in the end of the second episode of the digital comic. ![]() This is shown throughout the game, through the Thin Man's leisured walk, when he attempts to confront Mono. As at times when Mono would arrive in an area, the Thin Man appears almost immediately afterwards.Īdditionally, the Thin Man has a large sense of patience, persistence, and stoicism. The Thin Man also appears to be cunning, intelligent and always seems to be one step ahead of Mono. He shows high amounts of dedication when focused on a task, as he continuously stalks Mono throughout the Pale City even after the boy eludes his grasp many times. However, when Mono inadvertently frees him, the Thin Man focuses on pursuing Mono and Six specifically. Unlike other antagonists of the franchise who are aggressive and violent, the Thin Man acts calm and collected as he doggedly pursues Mono and Six, all while remaining seemingly hostile, nonetheless.įor unknown reasons, the Thin Man had kidnapped at least one child in Little Nightmares Comic when they approached a television. Like the many other characters in the Little Nightmares universe, the Thin Man does not speak and his personality is shown through his actions. His stature is crooked and misaligned, with cheekbones and closed eyes that appear sunken and emaciated, giving him a corpse-like appearance. Like his grayscale wardrobe, his bleak, wrinkled skin is similarly colorless, calling to mind black-and-white films of the 1940s-50s - a possible allusion to his ability to influence televisions. The Thin Man is a tall, slender being adorned in a black suit and hat, which ominously steeps his eyes in shadow. But there are probably better theories out there that I maybe haven't thought of yet.As the ever-present hum of The Transmission chokes the airwaves, The Thin Man continues his endless journey through this desolate place, haunting the shadows, searching for something. ![]() I think it also probably explains why the Lady never turned Six into a Nome- she can do it to natural humans, but not to other beings of pure power. I think this is probably the best I can come up with for why there are so many kids in a world where there aren't any parents. Though I'd assume these small groups tend to be killed off regularly, leaving a lot of these kids orphaned and probably most of them to die or become nomes. If we assume the world has been like this for a long time, it's probably likely that these underground humans evolved to be smaller, because there are certain advantages that come from being tiny in such a large world. The explanation I've come up with for the rest of them (which is complete speculation, but only because I'm given exactly nothing to work with here so I have to use my imagination) is that there are people who live in secret places- probably underground- who have kids to send out into the world to get things such as food and water. It makes sense for certain characters, but if you think about it, there are kinda too many children (RK, yellow raincoat girl, all the nomes, all the kids who are being wrapped up for meat in the first game) for it to make sense for all of them. I think these people don't just /have/ powers, but just /are/ beings of pure power. ![]() This world is clearly run by some sort of dark force, and there are several characters shown to have definite supernatural ability, like Six and Mono, the Lady and the Thin Man, the Pretender, etc. One is that these children are born not from parents, but from power anomalies. I have two theories that I guess can kind of go together. I'd really be interested to see what other people have to say, because I can't find any instance of this question being raised anywhere before. I have a couple personal theories, and I'm not sure which one I like better. So like, what's with all these kids? Where did they come from? Even if there were some non-monster human adults in this world, it's really unlikely that they'd be having kids at all. On the one hand, it makes sense that nobody would have kids in the sick, twisted world that Little Nightmares takes place in. Where do these children come from? Not a single one of them in the entire series seems to have parents, except maybe the villainous Pretender in VLM.īut none of them have parents. Wasn't sure whether to tag as question or theory, because I have my own headcanons but I really would like to see what other people think. ![]()
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