The alleged story of The "O.R.R.C.A. Operation."

According to the accounts of writers who frequented both the geocities and wikidot, the fanworks primarily consisted of mystical artifacts, eldritch horrors, and supernatural phenomenons, rather than the "if there is a bucket with a knife, and the bucket tips over when you grab the knife, it's an SCP" classification, according to one user. These stories were usually self-contained within an underground containment bunker, located [MISSING FONT] metres below the surface of [MISSING FONT], [MISSING FONT].

This bunker was given several names by its users, often called Trench-0A, Administration-CST, City-13, or simply "The Compound." The Compound, as it will be called here, was usually described as a bright white research facility, often referred to as "State of the Art." The walls were sometimes stated to be made of crystallised padding, a material that induces reconstruction at the cellular level if any damage is sustained. So much so, that a nuclear device had once been detonated within the facility, and by time the smoke had cleared, the walls remained intact, but nevertheless covered in smoot and ash.

The articles were often divided into two sections, according to our findings. The first section often began with one of several on-site personnel characters. The articles were often presented as transcripts of video recordings regarding those of the Entity itself. Such recordings, which have since been lost to time, included designations of the Entities, alongside supposed illustrations of it, files relative to containment procedure, containment locations, and colour-colored procedures in the event that said Entity might break containment within a possible FICTIONALIZED story.

The second section of the article was dedicated entirely to fan-content, two types of which were the most common outside of artwork or costumes of the entity. The first of these two were usually an animated video involving the Entity and the Compound's attempts to both understand and contain it. The second, lesser-common type were live-action videos, usually recreations of the animations, but sometimes documentaries from the perspective of its author. The animations, from thumbnails through an unrelated Google Video investigation, averaged in 8 to 15 minutes in length depending on the source article. Meanwhile, the videos, sometimes documentaries were only 3-5 minutes long, with just a few peaking at the 8 minute mark.

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