Videos are useful for spotting current player problems, but they are not a license to
copy screenshots, captions, or routes word-for-word. Use them as leads, then write
original notes and verify in-game when possible.
YouTube queue
Useful current video searches
The July 3 search pass found videos around all hidden secrets, all secrets plus anomaly
guide, how to beat all monsters, beginner tips, all anomalies, and class explanations.
The embedded videos below are research references only. Treat each one as a lead for
your own testing notes, not as a finished article draft.
Research checklist
How to turn videos into guide pages
Record the video title, creator, upload date, and exact topic.
Write the player problem in your own words: anomaly, class, monster, route, or secret.
Do not copy thumbnail images, subtitles, or full narration.
Cross-check with Fandom or in-game testing before adding hard claims.
Replace video-only claims with owned gameplay screenshots when the site gets tested manually.
Embedding rules
When a video belongs on the page
Embed a video only when it helps a reader verify a mechanic that is hard to explain
with text alone, such as a fast monster encounter, a hidden route, or a camera-based
anomaly. The surrounding article should still provide original written guidance, a
short context note, and a link back to the guide page that solves the player's search
intent.
If a video is outdated after a patch, remove or label it quickly. A beautiful embed is
not useful when it teaches an old route. The best use of video is as supporting proof:
the article explains the current method, and the embed gives readers a visual reference
without replacing the written walkthrough.
Manual capture plan
What to replace with owned material later
Once the game is tested manually, replace broad video references with owned notes:
where the shift starts, what the hospital rooms look like, which patient behavior is
normal, which anomaly cues are easy to miss, and what actions cost sanity. Owned notes
are stronger for search and safer for advertising review because they show original
effort rather than copied summaries.
TikTok and X should be treated as discovery channels. They are useful for spotting
sudden questions around a new monster, class, key, secret, or update countdown, but
they should not become the only source for a hard claim. Cross-check each clue against
official updates, Fandom edits, or direct gameplay before it becomes permanent guide
advice.