Endy And The Dark Revival
Tom is an alternative counterpart of Boris the Wolf and the cartoon form of Thomas Connor who appeared at the end of Chapter 4 and the start of Chapter 5 from Bendy and the Ink Machine along with Allison Angel.
endy and the Dark Revival
In "Bendy and the Ink Machine" Tom is nearly identical to the original Boris, with only a few differences; slanted eyebrows and a mechanical arm in place of his left forearm which seems to be a missing piece of the Bendy animatronic. He also wears a belt across his torso. Another difference is that his eyes are closer to each other, unlike Boris, and seem to face a different direction.
In "Bendy and the Dark Revival" his build looks different with it feeling less "cartoony" and more reminiscing of human anatomy. His eyes, while initially being different in the first game, now look exactly like the original Boris's eyes, while still maintaining the slanted eyebrows. He is missing a chunk of his left ear similar to Brute Boris, and his robot arm now looks more like a prosthetic arm but with a hand that is shaped like a Bendy glove. He has been given a sketchier look to him with better ink textures and a more scuffed up appearance with torn clothing, and scars on his face.
In the next scene, Allison states to Henry that Tom thinks he is dangerous. After that, Tom has an encounter with Ink Bendy off-screen, though he escaped. He is seen sitting on the table, while Allison scolds him for his reckless actions while repairing his mechanical arm, stating that it's just a matter of time before Ink Bendy finds them. After that, he and Allison talk about Ink Bendy outside their base. Allison states that they can't just leave Henry, though Tom is less than convinced. Allison tries to break the wooden planks that Henry is trapped behind, but Tom places his robotic hand on Allison's shoulder, implying to her that Henry's life was far less important than theirs and that they will never be able to free him in time. After that, they both depart the base. After their escape, Tom and Allison arrive in the Lost Harbor shortly after Henry (who managed to escape the prison on his own) arrived to save him from the now-insane Sammy Lawrence.
Tom returns in Bendy and the Dark Revival as a supporting character in Chapter Five. He is mentioned in Chapter One when Audrey meets Allison. He somewhat trusts Audrey when he finally meets her in person after Allison kills Twisted Alice, despite how he felt when he met Henry, distrusting him. He appears again in the final battle against the Ink Demon's Lost Ones, riding Big Steve, while Audrey (controlling Beast Bendy) tries to find a projector to reset the Cycle. It is not known what happens to Tom after this, but it can be presumed that he is still trapped in the cartoon world.
The gun features the ability to stunlock every enemy except Ink Bendy, who is completely invulnerable to this gun along with any other weapon Henry uses. It is especially useful against the Projectionist. Holding down the right mouse button allows Henry to infinitely shoot instead of clicking it one by one.
The Tommy Gun was wielded by Twisted Alice as her weapon when she tried to kill Audrey Drew. After she was killed by Allison Angel, her Tommy Gun was taken by her and later used when she helped Audrey when she controlled Beast Bendy and killed many of the hostile residents, and then shot Sammy several times, even though he seemed to be on Audrey's side at the time.
Bendy and the Dark Revival is a great horror game, using a similar format to that of many other Horror games. With Boss fights, puzzles, fetch quests, and being hunted by a new kind of Mr. X. The Dark Revival follows Audrey who cannot seem to catch a break. Trapped in the Ink Machine, being manipulated by Wilson Arch, stalked by the Ink Demon and hunted by every hostile Ink Entity in the game. This is our guide to solving the Alice Angel puzzle in Chapter 5 of Bendy and the Dark Revival.
This is one of the great details of Bendy and the Dark Revival, extending its game time length through collectibles, hidden secrets and unlocking the in-game achievements. For more Bendy and the Dark Revival content see our related article: All Memory Locations in Bendy and the Dark Revival.
Bendy and the Ink Machine[b] is an episodic first-person survival horror video game developed and published by Kindly Beast[a] under the name of the game's in-universe animation studio Joey Drew Studios Inc.[1][2] It was initially released to Game Jolt on February 10, 2017, as the first of five chapters, with a full worldwide release on October 27, 2018. The game was also released for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch on November 20, 2018, being published by Rooster Teeth Games, and for IOS and Android on December 21, 2018.
Bendy and the Ink Machine was well-received upon its initial release. Praise centered on its vintage aesthetic and story, although its puzzles and combat mechanics were less popular. In the months following its release, the game quickly gained a large following from exposure on platforms like YouTube and Twitch, and eventually was approved through Steam Greenlight in mid-2017. Merchandise, as well as a mobile spin-off, was later introduced to further promote the game. Mike Mood, the game's programmer and co-creator, described the game as an "accidental success".[3] Bendy and the Dark Revival, the next game in the series, was released on November 15, 2022.[4]
Bendy and the Ink Machine is a first person survival that resembles several cartoons in the 1920s to 1940s. The player plays as Henry Stein, a retired animator who returns to his old workplace, Joey Drew Studios, and discovers that a machine has destroyed the entire studio and brought certain cartoon characters to life. The game mixes combat with puzzle mechanics.[5] Players explore through a first-person view and have limited physical actions such as running and jumping.[6] Different items can be collected, some of which are required to perform various tasks before proceeding.[7] Cans of bacon soup can also be collected for achievements and to restore Henry's health if he is injured.[8]
Combat is primarily focused around a variety of different melee-based weapons, such as an axe, pipe, plunger, wrench, or scythe.[9] Additionally there are long-range weapons such as a tommy gun or bacon soup cans. In-game enemies have different strength levels and resilience to damage, forcing players to be tactical about keeping out of reach and striking when necessary.[10] Failure to do so will result in a death.[9] Henry can retreat inside Little Miracle Stations whenever enemies are nearby in order to recover or remain out of sight. If he takes too much damage, he can escape from the ink that consumes him and respawn at one of the numerous statues of Bendy that act as checkpoints.[11][12] The player can save their progress by interacting with time card stations.[12]
In the year 1963, Henry Stein, co-founder and former animator at Joey Drew Studios, is invited back to the studio by his former friend and business partner, Joey Drew. Henry enters the studio and finds it abandoned and dirtied up with ink splotches everywhere, as well as a mutilated, anthropomorphic figure in the form of Boris the Wolf, one of the studio's characters. Henry discovers that the messy ink was caused by the Ink Machine, a device Joey created after Henry had left which Joey intended to use to create real-life versions of the studio's cartoon characters. Henry fixes and turns on the machine by collecting various objects in a ritualistic fashion: a Bendy doll, a wrench, a record, a book, an ink jar, and a gear. After doing so, Henry goes back to the machine, but is attacked by a demon taking an ink-based form of the studio's mascot, Bendy the Dancing Demon. Henry tries to escape, but when he reaches the door, the floor under him gives way and he falls into the studio's lower levels. Walking on to find an exit, Henry drains out the ink to move forward and finds a room with coffins and a pentagram on the floor, the latter of which he steps on, causing him to hallucinate before passing out.
Henry wakes up and searches for a way out. He eventually comes to the music department and discovers an exit at the bottom of some stairs, but the stairs are flooded and blocking the door. After battling ink creatures known as Searchers, Henry finds music director Sammy Lawrence's office and finds a pump switch inside that could drain the ink at the stairs, but his office is blocked by a massive ink leak. Henry finds two valves that lower the ink pressure, one of which is held by a Searcher with a hat that he must defeat. At one point, he must learn to play Sammy's favorite song to open a door to reach the second valve. After stopping the leak, Henry drains the ink at the stairs. While approaching the stairs, however, he is knocked out by Sammy, who has turned into an ink humanoid with a Bendy mask. After Henry wakes up, Sammy reveals he intends to sacrifice Henry to Bendy, whom he worships as a deity, so that he can be free of the ink. As Sammy begins the ritual, though, he is attacked by Bendy and presumably killed. Henry breaks free and flees from Bendy into a storage room, locking the door behind him. Venturing into the room, he finds a fully intact Boris the Wolf.
Henry befriends Boris, and after Henry makes him 3 cans of soup, he gives Henry a lever needed to open the exit. The two leave Boris' safehouse to find another way out of the studio. After using a flashlight to make their way through a dark area, they come across the toy department and find a back room full of merchandise for Alice Angel, the studio's lead female. After Boris is briefly separated from Henry, he gives him a Gent pipe to use as a weapon. Henry is then confronted by an ink version of Alice Angel, who briefly knocks him out before summoning him to her lair. Before entering, Henry must choose whether to take the Demon path or the Angel path; the other path will close once Henry makes his choice. Inside, Henry and Boris discover multiple mutilated clones of Boris and other ink monsters collectively called the Butcher Gang, which Alice has been harvesting to improve her appearance. Meeting Alice, who is torturing one of the monsters, Henry is instructed to complete missions from her in exchange for being allowed to escape the studio. Doing so, he recovers things such as gears, power cells, hearts, and globs of ink from Swollen Searchers as well as being instructed to destroy Bendy cutouts and protect Alice's lair from enemies, all the while being hunted by Bendy, Searchers, the Butcher Gang, and the Projectionist, a projector-headed ink corrupted version of Norman Polk, the studio's projectionist. Alice also provides Henry with tools to help him: a wrench, a syringe, an axe, a plunger, and a tommy gun (which can only be obtained if certain actions are taken). Over the course of this, it becomes apparent that Alice is actually Susie Campbell, the original voice actress for the cartoon Alice who became obsessed with Alice to the point of believing she was her character, and grew vindictive after she was replaced by another actress, Allison Pendle; she has since taken Alice's form after being corrupted by the ink. After fulfilling her needs, she sends him to the elevator where he can leave, but forces the elevator to fall after discovering Boris, whom she wants to harvest as he is the most perfect Boris. The elevator crashes, knocking Henry out; as Boris tries to wake Henry up, Alice kidnaps Boris and takes him away. 041b061a72