Fabric World | |
---|---|
Basic Info | |
Japanese Name(s) |
ぜんまい衣装店:店裏 |
Effects | None |
Collectibles |
WP #168 |
Events | None |
Notable NPCs | Midori Tokuro |
Other | |
Connecting Areas | Dressing Room Guts World ➡️ |
BGM | 🔊 2_28 (No. 124C) |
Map ID | 0176 |
Version Added | 0.098g |
Last Updated | 0.115 patch 2 |
Author | Zenmaigahara |
Fabric World is a small area accessible from a hidden path in the Dressing Room.
Features
Fabric World is an area featuring islands made of a gray material with large needles stuck through the ground, smaller ones sewing underneath, and various fabric spinning wheels scattered around.
It is comprised of two areas, with a door at the end of the first leading to the main area. The larger, main area is filled with giant mannequin torsos broken into three parts, and floating doors scattered around, with the occasional needles here and there, that poke in and out of the ground.
Dotted sparsely around the main area are normally sized mannequin torsos, who appear to be struggling or even breathing. Equipping the Glasses effect near one of them will reveal the head of the mannequin. There is a green and black lady in this area named Midori Tokuro that takes you to Guts World when interacted with. If you chainsaw her she will be missing upon waking up alongside with all the other cases of her in Dressing Room, this will also have the negative effect of locking you out of Guts World as she will not be there to take you there, in order to respawn her you must talk to the grey boy in Bleak Future. There is also a 1/10 chance she respawns naturally via entering the Dressing Room via the Urotsuki's Dream Apartments.
Directions
- The Nexus → Urotsuki's Dream Apartments → Dressing Room → Fabric World
Trivia
- This world is one of only two to be named in Japanese after its creator. The other in Japanese is Ecstasy World and previously Heian Era Village.
- The only one named after its creator in English is GALAXY Town.
- The giant broken mannequin torsos could be a reference to the work of the 20th century surrealist artist Hans Bellmer, particularly his Doll series.
Gallery
- 312c31
- ac2240