“ | IT IS I, THE REAL FREDBEAR. | „ |
~ The Real Fredbear's signature quote. |
“ | GAZE UPON MY GLORIOUS SPRINGLOCKS. | „ |
~ The Real Fredbear before revealing his springlocks. |
“ | Once I give you life, you'll never be able to stop until you free everyone who's waiting to be freed. Can you do this for us? I need you to promise that you'll save everyone. Please. Make the world brand new. | „ |
~ The Real Fredbear making Jack promise to save everyone. |
The Real Fredbear or just Fredbear is one of the two overarching protagonists of the Five Nights at Freddy's fangame series Dayshift at Freddy's.
He is, as the name would imply, the original version of the Fredbear suit who serves as a protector of the missing children, with him wanting to give them their happiest day, he ressurects Jack Kennedy under the promise that he will free the tormented souls, depending on what route you choose to take in the game, this goal will be accomplished.
What Makes Him Pure Good?[]
- Unlike most of the Dayshift at Freddy's cast, who are either On & Off or full-on villains, the Real Fredbear has none of these traits, being one of the most consistently moral characters within the series who has little to no corrupting qualities to speak of.
- Despite Dayshift at Freddy's being a parody series, and the Real Fredbear himself being a parody, his heroic feats are played straight and he is never portrayed with any sort of incompetence.
- In order to set the victims of Dave and Henry Miller free, he ressurects Jack Kennedy so that he can give the missing children their happiest day, giving him a new chance at life and ultimately being the big reason Jack did anything admirable within the series to begin with.
- Within the good endings of both the first and second games, he will come in to assist Jack in his endeavors to achieve the happiest day, by either distracting the crowd with his springlocks, or fighting against a rogue Davetrap.
- In the evil route of the second game, The Real Fredbear directly intervenes at the tail-end of it, scolding Jack for breaking his promise and attempting to kill him as a way to fix his own mistake.
- When Jack points out how he had failed to save the missing children, The Real Fredbear lost all will to fight, expressing remorse over such despite the fact that it wasn't his fault.
- If Jack accomplishes the true ending after the evil route, Blackjack will state that he told the Real Fredbear of what he did to him, but that he will learn to forgive, showing that he doesn't hold grudges.
- While it could be argued that he has moral agency issues, as the games mention him being the embodiment of childhood, this is too vague to be mitigating, and even so, the routes that he appears in each game clearly show that he understands right and wrong.
- While it could be argued that he is arrogant with how he calls his springlocks "glorious", in reality, it's clear that he is anything but, having no ego and caring deeply about others.
- Despite mostly playing a hands off role within the story, he still manages to stand out due to being directly responsible for all of Jack's admirable deeds thanks to reviving him and making him promise to give the missing children their happiest day.
Trivia[]
- As of now, he is the only version of Fredbear to be classified as Pure Good.
External Links[]
- The Real Fredbear on the Dayshift at Freddy's Wiki
- The Real Fredbear on the Heroes Fanon Wiki
- The Real Fredbear on the The Ultimate Good Wiki
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Pure Goods | ||
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