Every fandom has its urban legends, but the Fundamental Paper Education (FPE) community has always been relatively immune to the classic "lost episode" rumors. Katie’s animations are beautifully crafted, with a distinct, chaotic energy that blends dark humor with striking paper-craft aesthetics. There was never any room for "cursed VHS tapes" or "hyper-realistic blood."
That was until the archive link was dropped in a small, private FPE Discord server.
The user who posted it had no profile picture and a name that was just a string of numbers. The message was simple:
"Unused animatic test. Do not share. FPE_Riley_Cut.mp4"
Being a massive fan of the series, I didn't think twice. I assumed it was just scrapped footage or an early storyboard Kaaatie had decided against using. I clicked the link, downloaded the 300MB file, and pressed play.
I still wish I hadn't.
The first thing that felt wrong was the absolute silence. If you know FPE, you know it's synonymous with upbeat, chaotic music. This file had no music. There was only a low, ambient hum, like the sound of an old refrigerator running in an empty house.
The animation style was also different. It still looked like Kaaatie’s iconic paper style, but the lines were jagged, sketchy, and frantic. The "paper" background didn't have its usual clean, lined-notebook look; it was stained, looking like it had been left out in the rain and dried into stiff, warped wrinkles.
The camera panned down the familiar school hallway. The lockers were drawn with uneven perspective. Standing at the end of the hall was Riley.
Normally, Riley is depicted with a manic, slightly unsettling energy, often holding her knife and obsessing over the bullies. But here, her single visible eye was wide open, the pupil shrunk to a tiny dot. She wasn’t holding a weapon. She was trembling.
As Riley began to walk, the animation framerate dropped. It went from smooth motion to choppy, two-frames-per-second stuttering. With every step she took, the scratching sound of a pencil against a microphone grew louder, grating against my ears.
She kept looking over her shoulder. The lighting in the animation began to darken, not as if a shadow was being cast, but as if the actual white space of the paper was being aggressively scribbled over by a thick, black charcoal stick.
Suddenly, Riley stopped. The camera zoomed in on her face, lingering for an uncomfortable amount of time—at least thirty seconds. The ambient humming pitched up into a faint, high-frequency ringing.
A drop of black ink fell from the top of the screen, landing on Riley’s paper shoulder.
In the FPE universe, characters are made of paper, and their world operates on those rules. When the ink hit her, it didn't just stain; it acted like acid. The paper of her shoulder began to dissolve, the edges curling and burning away into nothingness. Riley opened her mouth to scream, but no sound came out. Instead, the audio track played the sound of thick paper being slowly, agonizingly torn in half.
From the shadows at the end of the hallway, a figure emerged. It was Miss Circle, but her design was severely corrupted. Her iconic compass-hand was drawn entirely out of proportion, stretching across the width of the hallway. Her face had no features—just a massive, hollow circle that looked like a hole burned straight through the animation file itself.
Riley tried to run, but the "paper" floor beneath her began to crumple. The animation showed the ground physically folding upward, trapping her legs.
Miss Circle didn't walk; she glided forward in a series of static, unmoving frames. The scratching audio grew deafening, layered with the sound of a ticking clock that was ticking far too fast.
I tried to pause the video, but my media player froze. My mouse cursor wouldn't move. I could only watch as Miss Circle raised her distorted compass hand.
Instead of a typical slasher scene, the horror was entirely abstract. The compass didn't strike Riley. Instead, the point of the compass pierced the "camera lens."
The screen shattered into a mess of digital artifacts and static. Through the heavy glitching, the animation showed Riley completely enveloped in black ink. The ink seeped into the background, turning the entire screen pitch black, save for Riley's one eye, which remained stark white, staring directly at the viewer.
For the final ten seconds of the video, a distorted, synthesized voice whispered a single line, over and over, buried beneath the static:
"No more drafts. No more drafts. No more drafts."
The video abruptly cut to black, and my media player crashed, instantly closing itself.
I sat in silence for a long time, my heart hammering against my ribs. I immediately went back to the Discord server to ask what the hell that was, but the server was gone. Not just the message—the entire server had vanished from my list.
I tried to find the FPE_Riley_Cut.mp4 file in my downloads folder to analyze it, or at least prove I wasn't losing my mind. The file was still there, but its size had changed. It no longer read 300MB.
It read 0 bytes.
When I tried to click on it, an error message popped up: "File is corrupted or unreadable." After I closed the error box, the file deleted itself right before my eyes.
I still watch Fundamental Paper Education, but I can't look at Riley the same way anymore. Every time she appears on screen, smiling her manic smile, I catch myself looking at her shoulder, half-expecting to see a permanent, dark stain of black ink creeping across the paper.