Scare The Audience

''There are times when you have to inspire the fear of creativity into those who admire your work. What is wrong with you?''

When the creators intentionally make their audience feel unnerved, creeped out, tense, or fully horrified. UnTrashes, roles, and plots all have the potential to pull this off. What they all have in common is subtlety intensifies their effectiveness. Leaving figuring the truth out to the audience's imagination makes them wonder how crooked the story can get.

A character who aims to Scare The Audience has a colorful array of options before them. Roles like the Weirdo, Perv, Horn Dog, and Psycho are masters in this field. Their socially nontraditional or unacceptable habits are naturally revolting to the audience who asks themselves how someone could act so odd and be okay with it at the same time. Bonus behaviors like stalking or apparent obsession further this feeling. These freaky characters can really nail the creep factor with unusual appearances that make them look more like monsters than people. To go in the opposite direction of this, the Dreamboat and Hunk can manage to Scare The Audience, but they will have to work harder than Weirdos and Pervs. Going all in on the Perfect Choice appeal, they can attract women from all around with a lift of a muscular finger. This extreme attractiveness can be coupled with an off-putting and underlying sense of being too good to not be hiding something. If this is true, it's a sure sign these characters are products of 2Gud4U.net. It isn't only men who can creep the audience out this way. A female who excessively fawns over a male can come off as hyperfocused or out of touch with reality. This is the most common way Psycho Love is played, but it isn't the only version in fiction. A more seductive and sinister alternative can be written in which the female has a black-widow-type approach to getting her man. She advertises herself as playful or enamored by her prey before pretending to grow closer to him. When he fully buys into the trap is when the Siren makes her final move.

Maybe it isn't what someone has done that makes them such a turn-off for the audience. It may be what they seem to be capable of doing that Scares The Audience. A person who suspiciously owns a collection of knives or similar tools would look like they mean the world nothing but harm. Somebody who keeps to themselves, rarely speaks, and actively avoids confrontation could be figured to be plotting against everyone else. Pale skin, wide eyes, tiny or nonexistent pupils, wide and toothy grins, and strange attitudes are all signs of a dangerous individual. Though not certain to point to a Creeper, these features are common among players of the role. The voice in which these characters speak doesn't bring any more comfort to the audience. A monotonous or unsteady tone chills those who hear it through virtue of sterility and unease. The Creeper's context speaks of an individual who feels no pain and may at times even welcome it for any sort of inner stimulation.