Noting that new site member
Jackson explorer (account age 164 days, site membership 4 days) recently coldposted the following page: https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-9984/comments/show which was originally blank, and later edited to add increasingly more text and formatting. The most current revision, version 10, has extremely different writing style compared to the user's initial post and forum comments. Compare:
Revision 1:
Walkers are a race of tree creatures mainly located in Settle, Washington. They grow anywhere from 24 inches to over 350 feet. They are invisible to the naked eye but can be seen by dogs, cats, and any other animal that can see UV rays. They are omnivorous creatures, mainly eating small rodents, plants, or, for the largest specimens, larger mammals like bears, wolves, and even humans. They are classified as ecliud class because they barely try to escape containment and barely ever grow 350+ feet, but for the larger ones, they are very dangerous since they need 4.42m+ kcal a day, meaning they would eat 9.7 humpback whales a day for their kcal a day. They weigh around 100 tons at max, and for the smaller ones, 7 pounds at least. Even though they seem dangerous, the 66-100 feet specimens are very docile and nice like rabbits or cats, and rarely ever hurt humans.The 2-65 feet specimens are SCP 9982-A
Excerpt of note:
Walkers are a race of tree creatures mainly located in Settle, Washington. They grow anywhere from 24 inches to over 350 feet. They are invisible to the naked eye but can be seen by dogs, cats, and any other animal that can see UV rays. They are omnivorous creatures, mainly eating small rodents, plants, or, for the largest specimens, larger mammals like bears, wolves, and even humans. They are classified as ecliud class because they barely try to escape containment and barely ever grow 350+ feet, but for the larger ones, they are very dangerous since they need 4.42m+ kcal a day, meaning they would eat 9.7 humpback whales a day for their kcal a day.
Revision 8:
**Item #** 9984-A-C
**Class-safe**/euclid/keter/Thaumiall
**Containment protocol-**Keter class burn them since they are wooden.
**Site locations**-site-17 and site-19
**Description**-Walkers are a race of tree creatures mainly located in Settle, Washington. In 1980, the Walkers migrated to national parks all over America, having a population of 500 million per state. They grow anywhere from 24 inches to over 350 feet. They are omnivorous creatures, mainly eating small rodents, plants, or, for the largest specimens, larger mammals like bears, wolves, and even humans. They are classified as ecliud class because they barely try to escape containment and rarely grow to 350+ feet, but the larger ones are very dangerous, since they need 4.42m+ kcal a day, meaning they would eat 9.7 humpback whales a day to meet that requirement. They weigh around 100 tons at max, and the smaller ones at least 7 pounds. Even though they seem dangerous, the 66-100 feet specimens are very docile and nice like rabbits or cats, and rarely ever hurt humans. The 2-65-foot specimens are SCP 9984-A. They are the nicest of the SCP 9984 group. Their Latin name is arbores vivae, Latin for alive trees. People in the USA already know about their existence from their first sightings in 1889, from the Americas gaining North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington through treaties and organization. As time went on, sightings became more common, with seeing one as a daily occurrence. The largest specimen was seen on January 3rd, 2000, in Austin, Texas, at 496 feet and 11 inches. They are so common that they are rarely contained unless it is a 101-350+ foot walker, then it is to be immediately contained or burned. SCP 9984-A is a common household pet used for rodent control. SCP 9984-B, the 66-100 foot Walkers are docile and live in national parks all across America, mostly oak, birch, or Ginkgo trees, and are not a danger.SCP 9984-C are the 101-350+ sized Walkers, usually violent and dangerous Walkers eating bears, humans, and other large mammals.
**Abilities**-If the bark or sap of SCP 9984 is damaged or consumed, large time distortions will occur, throwing the person forward or backward in time by seconds, days, years, or decades. The larger the walker, the further the time moves.
Excerpts of note:
Description-Walkers are a race of tree creatures mainly located in Settle, Washington. In 1980, the Walkers migrated to national parks all over America, having a population of 500 million per state. They grow anywhere from 24 inches to over 350 feet. They are omnivorous creatures, mainly eating small rodents, plants, or, for the largest specimens, larger mammals like bears, wolves, and even humans. They are classified as ecliud class because they barely try to escape containment and rarely grow to 350+ feet, but the larger ones are very dangerous, since they need 4.42m+ kcal a day, meaning they would eat 9.7 humpback whales a day to meet that requirement.
Abilities-If the bark or sap of SCP 9984 is damaged or consumed, large time distortions will occur, throwing the person forward or backward in time by seconds, days, years, or decades. The larger the walker, the further the time moves.
Revision 10:
**Item #** 9984-A-C
**Class-**safe/euclid/keter/Thaumial
**Containment protocol-**For SCP-9984-A, there is no reason to try to contain them; for SCP-9984-B, they are to be contained in a 400x400 cell of wooded surroundings to make it feel like their home. SCP-9984-C is to be either destroyed on-site or contained underground in large concrete cells to restrict their movements
**Site locations**-site-17 and site-19
**Description**-Walkers (SCP-9984) are a taxonomic group of arboreal, ambulatory organisms primarily documented in the region of present-day Seattle, Washington. The species underwent a rapid range expansion in 1980, establishing stable populations throughout U.S. national parks, with estimated densities reaching up to 500 million individuals per state. Adult height ranges from approximately 24 in (0.6 m) to over 350 ft (106.7 m).
Walkers are omnivorous, consuming small mammals, vegetation, and, in the case of the largest specimens, megafauna including bears, wolves, and occasionally humans. SCP-9984 is classified as Ecluid-Class due to its generally low tendency toward containment breach and the rarity of individuals exceeding 350 ft in height. However, specimens within the upper size range exhibit significant bioenergetic demands, requiring an estimated ≥4.42 million kcal per day—an equivalent of approximately 9.7 adult humpback whales—to maintain metabolic function. Mass ranges from ~7 lb (3.2 kg) in the smallest individuals to ~100 tons in the largest.
Specimens measuring 66–100 ft (SCP-9984-B) exhibit consistent docility and demonstrate behavior patterns comparable to domesticated lagomorphs or felines. Individuals ranging from 2–65 ft (SCP-9984-A) are considered the most behaviorally stable and are commonly utilized for rodent-control purposes in domestic environments.
The species is formally designated Arbores Vivae (“living trees”). Human populations in the United States were aware of the species as early as 1889, following increased exploration and territorial organization of the northern plains and Pacific Northwest. Sightings subsequently became routine, with daily encounters reported by the late 20th century. The largest confirmed individual was observed on 3 January 2000 in Austin, Texas, measuring 496 ft 11 in (151.4 m).
Due to their prevalence, containment is typically unnecessary except for SCP-9984-C specimens (101–350+ ft), which display heightened aggression and predatory behaviors toward large mammals, including humans, and must be immediately secured or neutralized upon detection.
**Abilities**-The organism’s root system exhibits advanced chemosensory capabilities, allowing it to detect and interpret fluctuations in soil-borne biochemical markers (e.g., stress hormones, metabolic byproducts, pheromonal residues) produced by nearby fauna. These chemical signatures are processed as analogs to emotional states, enabling the tree to infer the presence and affective condition of surrounding organisms.
Excerpts of note:
Description-Walkers (SCP-9984) are a taxonomic group of arboreal, ambulatory organisms primarily documented in the region of present-day Seattle, Washington. The species underwent a rapid range expansion in 1980, establishing stable populations throughout U.S. national parks, with estimated densities reaching up to 500 million individuals per state. Adult height ranges from approximately 24 in (0.6 m) to over 350 ft (106.7 m).
Walkers are omnivorous, consuming small mammals, vegetation, and, in the case of the largest specimens, megafauna including bears, wolves, and occasionally humans. SCP-9984 is classified as Ecluid-Class due to its generally low tendency toward containment breach and the rarity of individuals exceeding 350 ft in height. However, specimens within the upper size range exhibit significant bioenergetic demands, requiring an estimated ≥4.42 million kcal per day—an equivalent of approximately 9.7 adult humpback whales—to maintain metabolic function. Mass ranges from ~7 lb (3.2 kg) in the smallest individuals to ~100 tons in the largest.
Abilities-The organism’s root system exhibits advanced chemosensory capabilities, allowing it to detect and interpret fluctuations in soil-borne biochemical markers (e.g., stress hormones, metabolic byproducts, pheromonal residues) produced by nearby fauna. These chemical signatures are processed as analogs to emotional states, enabling the tree to infer the presence and affective condition of surrounding organisms.
Compare with user's only two forum posts:
https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/forum/t-17483658/scp-9984#post-7460516
Will you give me some tips on making my SCP an actual
scp
https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/forum/t-17483658/scp-9984#post-7460660
I fixed a lot of it and gave it anomalous effects as people demand, or it's not a SCP, which is very stupid because it's a living tree that moves and interacts with the world ,how is that not a SCP
Permabanned, PM sent. subtletea, storm, Queerious, Kufat, Zoobeeny supporting.