Scott Cawthon, the creator of the Five Nights at Freddy's games, has announced that he is retiring from the series — but said that his retirement will not be the end of the beloved survival horror franchise. The news follows a controversy launched by a discovery that Cawthon made donations to Republican candidates during the 2020 U.S. election.

On Wednesday, game designer Scott Cawthon announced his retirement from making Five Night's at Freddy's games in a letter posted on his website. In the statement, Cawthon talks about having had a "blessed and fulfilling career" while working on the game series that started in 2014 with Five Nights at Freddy's, and as of 2021, it includes 10 main games and several spin-offs.

I've had a blessed, fulfilling, and rich career. I've been shown great kindness and I've tried to show great kindness in return. I've tried to make some good games (let the debate ensue), and I've witnessed the creation of possibly the most creative and talented fanbase on the planet.
I have been shown tremendous love and support over this last week, a lot of which has come from the LGBTQ community. The kindness shown to me has been surreal.

Cawthon has clarified that his retirement does not mean the end of Five Nights at Freddy's, as the duty to continue the legacy of the franchise will fall on a person of Cawthon's choosing. As for Cawthon himself, he is planning to continue video game development, but will instead focus on doing it for his kids and for fun, and will likely try his hand at making RPGs again.

Is this the end of FNAF? No. This just means that someone else will eventually be running the show; someone of my choosing, and someone that I trust.

Last week, Cawthon became a subject of discussions online after screenshots of his donations to Republican candidates during the 2020 U.S. elections went viral on social media. Prior to announcing his retirement, the designer made a Reddit post in which he stood by his views and refused to make any apologies.

The news of Cawthon's retirement sent the "#ThankYouScott" hashtag trending on Twitter as many Five Nights at Freddy's fans thanked the designer for his years of working on the franchise that spawned countless fan art and memes.


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Comments 7 total

Punkypine

Came here to confirm that this is still being justified six months later. Apparently, not only did Twitter NOT force Scott to retire, but he totally deserved it because he was donating to people like Mitch McConnell. If you think this shit was ridiculous, then you don't care about whether or not gay people have rights. And the threatening and hateful words towards Scott were just criticism.

I'm only not telling this YouTube commenter to fuck the hell off because I'm sure he wouldn't.

0

strhi

Nothing of value got lost.

-1

Smol Nozomi

The fans are like Thank You Scott! Wow we miss you! I'm just really genuinely angry.

I'm sneeding

0

Crystal Geyser

Cancel culture does it again!
Another win for the armchair activists on twitter!
Soy lattes are on me boys/girls/shims/shers/cenobites/Attack choppers!

0

Dracorex

You fucking monsters.

2

KnowYourUsername

>gets doxxed
>retires
>becomes family man of 6 kids
>Twitter can't do shit anymore
>refuses to elaborate further
>leaves as a renowned indie dev
>may still donate further to politicians Twitter doesn't like anyway

18

AnonBlah867

If he's retiring specifically because of being bullied, then he's validating the bullies by letting their hate crimes have a measurable effect on the franchise.

If he was planning to retire anyway, then this was the absolute worst possible time to make the announcement.

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