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* Ever since DHMIS 2 came out, people have been referring to the puppets as Harry, Robin, and Manny, as well as the clock as Tony. Source?
** This Troper agrees, where did these names come from? Also, why Manny? His shirt had a D on it...
** From what I can gather, it's just a collection of names that popped up somewhere that the fandom adopted. I haven't found any official sources stating their names.
** Okay, because if it turns out the names are unofficial fan names, I'm going to have to make a mass edit unless I can get an official source. Otherwise, WordOfGod this is not.
** It seems like a lot more fanon is being added to these entries that stuff that is actually confirmed, which needs to be fixed. As far as I can tell, none of these names are WordOfGod or have any source at all.
** The name, Tony, for the clock actually was confirmed in an [[http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/18301/1/beckyjoe-are-this-weeks-dazed-visionaries interview between Becky Sloan and Dazed Magazine.]] The other names, however, appear to be just {{Fanon}}.
** The Notepad from the first film is also confirmed to be named Sketchbook.
* So apparently the red puppet is named Harry because it sounds like hairy, but they're British, so Harry sounds nothing like hairy.
* Precisely how old are the puppets? The picture that clock points to in DHMIS 2 is dated 19/06/55. (For that matter, why do the two videos also take place on June 19? [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBGTSJhi0EQ Shadow's Birthday?]])
** BEEP BOOP BEEP (also you get a thumbs up for being a MH/THAC fan)
** I don't see why their ages would matter. Just repeat the MST3KMantra.
** Maybe the videos take place in the TheFifties or TheSixties?
*** Tony references the picture as being "far behind us" so I'm not entirely certain if that could be so. Seventies, maybe? But then again all of the technology shown was post-Seventies and oh dear I've gone cross-eyed again. Worth mentioning, though, is that the Kickstarter video also has a timestamp of 19/06/55.
** For one, consider that the supposed "correct" interpretation of time (given that Tony tried to censor it) is that it's just an illusion created by human perception. Time is... relatively unimportant. Also, everything ever has happened on June 19th. It's... time's inconsistency is, I would assume, just part of the MindScrew.
** With the recent release of DHMIS 4, the topic of computers ruins the theory that DHMIS takes place in the mid-50's.
** If you believe that the puppet trio are all children then this idea will not work at all, but there could be a chance that the date itself shows their ages: The red guy would be 19, making him a snarky teenager (See his behavior with the 'teachers'), the yellow guy would be 6, fitting for his immaturity and more dimwitted self, and the bird guy would be 55, which is more of a stretch but still could work as he wears a tweed suit and is in a rocking chair in DHMIS2.
* People often describe the Bird as being green, or draw him in fanart as green, but am I the only one kind of confused by this because I see him as more black-with-a-greenish-tint? Perhaps it's a case of HairColorDissonance, or because he's green in the ArtShift where they show the characters in CGI, but the actual puppet? If he's green, he's a lot darker green than the fandom seems to think.
** His puppet became a brighter shade of green in the second video, which is when more people seemed to join the fandom.
* Why do people refer to the trio as "the puppets" to distinguish them from the Object characters? Aren't the Clock and the Notepad technically puppets too?
** Not only that, the red guy is a person in a suit and therefore not even a puppet?
*** The Kickstarter video says that DHMIS is "a show about puppets learning stuff", so the puppets/objects dichotomy is one Becky & Joe support, regardless of reasoning. As for why this dichotomy grew out in the first place, it's probably more for the sake of consistency -- Red, Yellow, and Green appear in DHMIS 1 and 2 (as opposed to either or, like Sketchbook and Tony), and MemeticMutation in the fandom has just made it easier to refer to them collectively as "the puppets" (even if Red is technically a human in a costume -- it's close enough).
** It's probably due to the fact that the teachers so far all have a clearly defined species (notepad, clock, and butterfly), while Manny and Harry are just generic "puppets" and Robin, while identifiable as a bird, doesn't appear to be any real species.
* Why do they feed Malcolm gravel?
** [[InsaneTrollLogic Because he's the king.]]
** Because Malcolm gets angry when they don't feed him gravel. Apparently, no one wants to face his wrath.
** Because the nut job(s) who founded the cult randomly decided it was necessary, and then brainwashed anyone else who joined into accepting it.
** Malcolm's gotta eat too.
** You can hear Malcolm say, "Mmm, gravel." He probably specifically asks for it. Note that he seems to be made out of stone, so there's some logic in him being nourished by stone.
* If the puppets lost body parts in one of the Kickstarter videos, why do they still have them in the third video? It makes sense that Red Guy missing an ear wouldn't be noticeable because of his hair/tentacles, but why does the Bird still have both his eyes, and the Yellow Puppet still has all of his fingers?
** It's possible that #3 wasn't canon (and it was taken down anyways). It's possible that they have [[UnexplainedRecovery UnexplainedRecoveries]] like how they recovered from rapidly aging in DHMIS2.
** As of DHMIS 6, it's been revealed that [[spoiler: none of their "deaths" were real, as they were in a simulation.]]
* What's the reason behind the misspellings of certain words that come up on screen? In DHMIS 2, "wrist" flashes as "RizD" and in DHMIS 3, "harmony" is misspelled "harmunne". Does anyone have an explanation?
** RuleOfFunny I'm almost certain.
*** Perhaps it's to show that these guys are really, really bad at teaching?
** In episode 3, I thought it was because that part was Yellow Guy's dream, and he can't spell.
* If love is only meant for your "Special One" in the Cult of Malcolm, how come they told Yellow Guy they loved him and that they loved each other and that they loved their stuff (Like a Pet Crab)?
** They're hypocrites, like Sketchbook pushing her version of creativity on the puppets and Tony saying there will always be enough time, and then making them run out of time.
** The other cultists also most likely already had a Special One, and so no longer needed to save up their love for one.
* Who burned down Malcolm? Why does he have the Kickstarter Monster's Gas Canteen? And why did he burn down Malcolm?
** I'd wager it's an allusion to ''The Wicker Man'', which was also about a deranged love cult and ended with setting a religious idol on fire.
* Was the Maggot thing stop motion?
* What's with oats in DHMIS 4?
** Oats are just a recurring food, like "fish everywhere" or a "chicken picnic"
** They could symbolize ads.
* I know it's invoking MindScrew, but what is happening in ''5''? Every time Duck Guy answers the phone, he's taken out of the kitchen and into the operating room, watching the kitchen on TV, but he goes back pretty quickly. What's the link, and how does he end up on Yellow Guy's plate?
** As always for this series, it's difficult to answer conclusively. But going by the fact that Red Guy was shown leaving a phone booth at the end, the implication may be that he was calling the other puppets to try to get them out of the show. Duck Guy thought he was in the kitchen, but he was actually in the operating room, and the phone call brought him to his senses, however briefly. He ends up on Yellow Guy's plate when the cans have succeeded in harvesting him for meat, which the Healthy Band can start feeding to Yellow Guy.
** I don't think it was really supposed to make sense, because that was kind of the point.The fact that so much of the video is nonsense just goes to drive Duck Guy, who is usually the puppet who favors logic and tries to make sense of things, further into anxiety until he can't take it anymore. As for the phone calls themselves, the phone was probably Red Guy's warnings about what was happening to Duck Guy and Yellow Guy. When he made Duck Guy more aware of all the inherent nonsense going on around them, he unknowingly led his friend to his death.
* Why does it appear that the main characters are missing in-universe?
* In the interview with the site itsnicethat, why did most of Duck Guy's answers make no sense? He's usually the most logical of the three, so seeing him give such nonsensical answers seems rather confusing and out of character.
** In light of DHMIS 6, it's possible that though Duck Guy was [[spoiler: KilledOffForReal]] in DHMIS 5, the [[spoiler: simulated world]] held on to remnants of his consciousness, evidenced by the line [[spoiler: "WHERE AM I?!"]] in DHMIS 6. You could come to the conclusion that [[spoiler: Roy]] or perhaps [[spoiler: the simulation machine itself]] was trying its hardest to spit out coherent answers but being an A.I., lacked the capacity and power to do that.
** It's a common fan theory that Duck Guy is meant to represent the elderly. Maybe he went senile, [[spoiler:and his reappearance in episode 6 represents a rare moment of lucidity.]]
* Having watched DHMIS 6... [[spoiler: was Duck Guy a program that rebelled all this time?]]
** If you're talking about how Green Guy appeared when Red Guy was pressing buttons and then turned into the solar system teacher, it also turns into Red Guy a few times. So Green Guy could be a program, but if he is then Red Guy might be a program too.
* What does the ending of DHMIS 6 imply? The gang changes colors, it turns to June 20th, and then the sketchbook pops up. I can't really grasp what any of that meant. Please help.
** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]] where they have to go [[HereWeGoAgain through everything again]], possibly.
** Alternatively, given that they're all now their favourite colours and the date has finally changed, it could symbolize that they're now able to move forward in life and be whatever they want to be. The fact that the room has a door which wasn't there in the first supports this.
** Alternatively alternatively, it's showing the cycle repeating with the next generation, hence the date moving forward one. The fact that they're all the favourite colours of their predecessors indicates that [[spoiler:[[GenerationXerox the puppets are indoctrinating their children to conform to their ideas of things like creativity and love the same way Roy indoctrinated them.]]]] This is supported by the shot before [[spoiler:Red Guy pulls the plug on Roy's machine]] showing Yellow Guy's appearance starting to change to look more like Roy.
** Alternatively alternatively alternatively, it doesn't imply anything. A consistent pattern throughout the series is that the villains always want to tell everyone what to do and think, so what better way to end it than with a scene that can be interpreted any way you want? This is supported by the BookEnds; they close the series by asking what ''your'' favourite idea of how to interpret the whole thing is.
** Alternatively alternatively alternatively alternatively, the puppets' show got taken off the air and was replaced by a cheap knockoff show filled with {{Captain Ersatz}}es of the characters.
** 19 June 1955 (the date so commonly referenced throughout the series) as well as 19 June 2016, when DHMIS 6 was released, were both Father's Day. The character who seems to control the whole show was Roy, who is ''Yellow Guy's father, as well as being a DirtyOldMan and generally creepy. Since June 20th is no longer Father's Day, the show is free from Roy's corrupting influence.
*** Roy's corrupting of the show is suggested heavily in Episode 5, where the kitchen is full of Roy's food products, which are all grain-based, suggesting Roy is a farmer. Almost all the Healthy Band's list of "healthy foods" are grain or dairy-based (except for [[RuleOfFunny aspic]] of course): bread, cream, pizza, and "white sauce". Of course since the band contradict themselves so much it might be a moot point in the end.

to:

* Ever since DHMIS 2 came out, people have been referring to the puppets as Harry, Robin, and Manny, as well as the clock as Tony. Source?
** This Troper agrees, where did these names come from? Also, why Manny? His shirt had a D on it...
** From what I can gather, it's just a collection of names that popped up somewhere that the fandom adopted. I haven't found any official sources stating their names.
** Okay, because if it turns out the names are unofficial fan names, I'm going to have to make a mass edit unless I can get an official source. Otherwise, WordOfGod this is not.
** It seems like a lot more fanon is being added to these entries that stuff that is actually confirmed, which needs to be fixed. As far as I can tell, none of these names are WordOfGod or have any source at all.
** The name, Tony, for the clock actually was confirmed in an [[http://www.dazeddigital.com/artsandculture/article/18301/1/beckyjoe-are-this-weeks-dazed-visionaries interview between Becky Sloan and Dazed Magazine.]] The other names, however, appear to be just {{Fanon}}.
** The Notepad from the first film is also confirmed to be named Sketchbook.
* So apparently the red puppet is named Harry because it sounds like hairy, but they're British, so Harry sounds nothing like hairy.
* Precisely how old are the puppets? The picture that clock points to in DHMIS 2 is dated 19/06/55. (For that matter, why do the two videos also take place on June 19? [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YBGTSJhi0EQ Shadow's Birthday?]])
** BEEP BOOP BEEP (also you get a thumbs up for being a MH/THAC fan)
** I don't see why their ages would matter. Just repeat the MST3KMantra.
** Maybe the videos take place in the TheFifties or TheSixties?
*** Tony references the picture as being "far behind us" so I'm not entirely certain if that could be so. Seventies, maybe? But then again all of the technology shown was post-Seventies and oh dear I've gone cross-eyed again. Worth mentioning, though, is that the Kickstarter video also has a timestamp of 19/06/55.
** For one, consider that the supposed "correct" interpretation of time (given that Tony tried to censor it) is that it's just an illusion created by human perception. Time is... relatively unimportant. Also, everything ever has happened on June 19th. It's... time's inconsistency is, I would assume, just part of the MindScrew.
** With the recent release of DHMIS 4, the topic of computers ruins the theory that DHMIS takes place in the mid-50's.
** If you believe that the puppet trio are all children then this idea will not work at all, but there could be a chance that the date itself shows their ages: The red guy would be 19, making him a snarky teenager (See his behavior with the 'teachers'), the yellow guy would be 6, fitting for his immaturity and more dimwitted self, and the bird guy would be 55, which is more of a stretch but still could work as he wears a tweed suit and is in a rocking chair in DHMIS2.
* People often describe the Bird as being green, or draw him in fanart as green, but am I the only one kind of confused by this because I see him as more black-with-a-greenish-tint? Perhaps it's a case of HairColorDissonance, or because he's green in the ArtShift where they show the characters in CGI, but the actual puppet? If he's green, he's a lot darker green than the fandom seems to think.
** His puppet became a brighter shade of green in the second video, which is when more people seemed to join the fandom.
* Why do people refer to the trio as "the puppets" to distinguish them from the Object characters? Aren't the Clock and the Notepad technically puppets too?
** Not only that, the red guy is a person in a suit and therefore not even a puppet?
*** The Kickstarter video says that DHMIS is "a show about puppets learning stuff", so the puppets/objects dichotomy is one Becky & Joe support, regardless of reasoning. As for why this dichotomy grew out in the first place, it's probably more for the sake of consistency -- Red, Yellow, and Green appear in DHMIS 1 and 2 (as opposed to either or, like Sketchbook and Tony), and MemeticMutation in the fandom has just made it easier to refer to them collectively as "the puppets" (even if Red is technically a human in a costume -- it's close enough).
** It's probably due to the fact that the teachers so far all have a clearly defined species (notepad, clock, and butterfly), while Manny and Harry are just generic "puppets" and Robin, while identifiable as a bird, doesn't appear to be any real species.
* Why do they feed Malcolm gravel?
** [[InsaneTrollLogic Because he's the king.]]
** Because Malcolm gets angry when they don't feed him gravel. Apparently, no one wants to face his wrath.
** Because the nut job(s) who founded the cult randomly decided it was necessary, and then brainwashed anyone else who joined into accepting it.
** Malcolm's gotta eat too.
** You can hear Malcolm say, "Mmm, gravel." He probably specifically asks for it. Note that he seems to be made out of stone, so there's some logic in him being nourished by stone.
* If the puppets lost body parts in one of the Kickstarter videos, why do they still have them in the third video? It makes sense that Red Guy missing an ear wouldn't be noticeable because of his hair/tentacles, but why does the Bird still have both his eyes, and the Yellow Puppet still has all of his fingers?
** It's possible that #3 wasn't canon (and it was taken down anyways). It's possible that they have [[UnexplainedRecovery UnexplainedRecoveries]] like how they recovered from rapidly aging in DHMIS2.
** As of DHMIS 6, it's been revealed that [[spoiler: none of their "deaths" were real, as they were in a simulation.]]
* What's the reason behind the misspellings of certain words that come up on screen? In DHMIS 2, "wrist" flashes as "RizD" and in DHMIS 3, "harmony" is misspelled "harmunne". Does anyone have an explanation?
** RuleOfFunny I'm almost certain.
*** Perhaps it's to show that these guys are really, really bad at teaching?
** In episode 3, I thought it was because that part was Yellow Guy's dream, and he can't spell.
* If love is only meant for your "Special One" in the Cult of Malcolm, how come they told Yellow Guy they loved him and that they loved each other and that they loved their stuff (Like a Pet Crab)?
** They're hypocrites, like Sketchbook pushing her version of creativity on the puppets and Tony saying there will always be enough time, and then making them run out of time.
** The other cultists also most likely already had a Special One, and so no longer needed to save up their love for one.
* Who burned down Malcolm? Why does he have the Kickstarter Monster's Gas Canteen? And why did he burn down Malcolm?
** I'd wager it's an allusion to ''The Wicker Man'', which was also about a deranged love cult and ended with setting a religious idol on fire.
* Was the Maggot thing stop motion?
* What's with oats in DHMIS 4?
** Oats are just a recurring food, like "fish everywhere" or a "chicken picnic"
** They could symbolize ads.
* I know it's invoking MindScrew, but what is happening in ''5''? Every time Duck Guy answers the phone, he's taken out of the kitchen and into the operating room, watching the kitchen on TV, but he goes back pretty quickly. What's the link, and how does he end up on Yellow Guy's plate?
** As always for this series, it's difficult to answer conclusively. But going by the fact that Red Guy was shown leaving a phone booth at the end, the implication may be that he was calling the other puppets to try to get them out of the show. Duck Guy thought he was in the kitchen, but he was actually in the operating room, and the phone call brought him to his senses, however briefly. He ends up on Yellow Guy's plate when the cans have succeeded in harvesting him for meat, which the Healthy Band can start feeding to Yellow Guy.
** I don't think it was really supposed to make sense, because that was kind of the point.The fact that so much of the video is nonsense just goes to drive Duck Guy, who is usually the puppet who favors logic and tries to make sense of things, further into anxiety until he can't take it anymore. As for the phone calls themselves, the phone was probably Red Guy's warnings about what was happening to Duck Guy and Yellow Guy. When he made Duck Guy more aware of all the inherent nonsense going on around them, he unknowingly led his friend to his death.
* Why does it appear that the main characters are missing in-universe?
* In the interview with the site itsnicethat, why did most of Duck Guy's answers make no sense? He's usually the most logical of the three, so seeing him give such nonsensical answers seems rather confusing and out of character.
** In light of DHMIS 6, it's possible that though Duck Guy was [[spoiler: KilledOffForReal]] in DHMIS 5, the [[spoiler: simulated world]] held on to remnants of his consciousness, evidenced by the line [[spoiler: "WHERE AM I?!"]] in DHMIS 6. You could come to the conclusion that [[spoiler: Roy]] or perhaps [[spoiler: the simulation machine itself]] was trying its hardest to spit out coherent answers but being an A.I., lacked the capacity and power to do that.
** It's a common fan theory that Duck Guy is meant to represent the elderly. Maybe he went senile, [[spoiler:and his reappearance in episode 6 represents a rare moment of lucidity.]]
* Having watched DHMIS 6... [[spoiler: was Duck Guy a program that rebelled all this time?]]
** If you're talking about how Green Guy appeared when Red Guy was pressing buttons and then turned into the solar system teacher, it also turns into Red Guy a few times. So Green Guy could be a program, but if he is then Red Guy might be a program too.
* What does the ending of DHMIS 6 imply? The gang changes colors, it turns to June 20th, and then the sketchbook pops up. I can't really grasp what any of that meant. Please help.
** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]] where they have to go [[HereWeGoAgain through everything again]], possibly.
** Alternatively, given that they're all now their favourite colours and the date has finally changed, it could symbolize that they're now able to move forward in life and be whatever they want to be. The fact that the room has a door which wasn't there in the first supports this.
** Alternatively alternatively, it's showing the cycle repeating with the next generation, hence the date moving forward one. The fact that they're all the favourite colours of their predecessors indicates that [[spoiler:[[GenerationXerox the puppets are indoctrinating their children to conform to their ideas of things like creativity and love the same way Roy indoctrinated them.]]]] This is supported by the shot before [[spoiler:Red Guy pulls the plug on Roy's machine]] showing Yellow Guy's appearance starting to change to look more like Roy.
** Alternatively alternatively alternatively, it doesn't imply anything. A consistent pattern throughout the series is that the villains always want to tell everyone what to do and think, so what better way to end it than with a scene that can be interpreted any way you want? This is supported by the BookEnds; they close the series by asking what ''your'' favourite idea of how to interpret the whole thing is.
** Alternatively alternatively alternatively alternatively, the puppets' show got taken off the air and was replaced by a cheap knockoff show filled with {{Captain Ersatz}}es of the characters.
** 19 June 1955 (the date so commonly referenced throughout the series) as well as 19 June 2016, when DHMIS 6 was released, were both Father's Day. The character who seems to control the whole show was Roy, who is ''Yellow Guy's father, as well as being a DirtyOldMan and generally creepy. Since June 20th is no longer Father's Day, the show is free from Roy's corrupting influence.
*** Roy's corrupting of the show is suggested heavily in Episode 5, where the kitchen is full of Roy's food products, which are all grain-based, suggesting Roy is a farmer. Almost all the Healthy Band's list of "healthy foods" are grain or dairy-based (except for [[RuleOfFunny aspic]] of course): bread, cream, pizza, and "white sauce". Of course since the band contradict themselves so much it might be a moot point in the end.
[[redirect:Headscratchers/DontHugMeImScared]]

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Changed: 4

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** Alternatively alternatively, it's showing the cycle repeating with the next generation, hence the date moving forward one. The fact that they're all the favourite colours of their predecessors indicates that [[spoiler:[[GenerationXerox the puppets are indoctrinating their children to conform to their ideas of things like creativity and love the same way Roy indoctrinated them.]]]] This is supported by the shot before [[spoiler:Red Guy pulls the plug on Roy's machine]] shows Yellow Guy's appearance starting to change to look more like Roy.

to:

** Alternatively alternatively, it's showing the cycle repeating with the next generation, hence the date moving forward one. The fact that they're all the favourite colours of their predecessors indicates that [[spoiler:[[GenerationXerox the puppets are indoctrinating their children to conform to their ideas of things like creativity and love the same way Roy indoctrinated them.]]]] This is supported by the shot before [[spoiler:Red Guy pulls the plug on Roy's machine]] shows showing Yellow Guy's appearance starting to change to look more like Roy.


Added DiffLines:

** Alternatively alternatively alternatively alternatively, the puppets' show got taken off the air and was replaced by a cheap knockoff show filled with {{Captain Ersatz}}es of the characters.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Alternatively alternatively alternatively, it doesn't imply anything. A consistent pattern throughout the series is that the villains always want to tell everyone what to do and think, so what better way to end it than with a scene that can be interpreted any way you want? This is supported by the BookEnds; they close the series by asking what ''your'' favourite idea of how to interpret the whole thing is.

to:

** Alternatively alternatively alternatively, it doesn't imply anything. A consistent pattern throughout the series is that the villains always want to tell everyone what to do and think, so what better way to end it than with a scene that can be interpreted any way you want? This is supported by the BookEnds; they close the series by asking what ''your'' favourite idea of how to interpret the whole thing is.is.
** 19 June 1955 (the date so commonly referenced throughout the series) as well as 19 June 2016, when DHMIS 6 was released, were both Father's Day. The character who seems to control the whole show was Roy, who is ''Yellow Guy's father, as well as being a DirtyOldMan and generally creepy. Since June 20th is no longer Father's Day, the show is free from Roy's corrupting influence.
*** Roy's corrupting of the show is suggested heavily in Episode 5, where the kitchen is full of Roy's food products, which are all grain-based, suggesting Roy is a farmer. Almost all the Healthy Band's list of "healthy foods" are grain or dairy-based (except for [[RuleOfFunny aspic]] of course): bread, cream, pizza, and "white sauce". Of course since the band contradict themselves so much it might be a moot point in the end.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** It's a common fan theory that Duck Guy is meant to represent the elderly. Maybe he went senile, [[spoiler:and his reappearance in episode 6 represents a rare moment of lucidity.]]



** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]] where they have to go [[HereWeGoAgain through everything again]], possibly.

to:

** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]] where they have to go [[HereWeGoAgain through everything again]], possibly.possibly.
** Alternatively, given that they're all now their favourite colours and the date has finally changed, it could symbolize that they're now able to move forward in life and be whatever they want to be. The fact that the room has a door which wasn't there in the first supports this.
** Alternatively alternatively, it's showing the cycle repeating with the next generation, hence the date moving forward one. The fact that they're all the favourite colours of their predecessors indicates that [[spoiler:[[GenerationXerox the puppets are indoctrinating their children to conform to their ideas of things like creativity and love the same way Roy indoctrinated them.]]]] This is supported by the shot before [[spoiler:Red Guy pulls the plug on Roy's machine]] shows Yellow Guy's appearance starting to change to look more like Roy.
** Alternatively alternatively alternatively, it doesn't imply anything. A consistent pattern throughout the series is that the villains always want to tell everyone what to do and think, so what better way to end it than with a scene that can be interpreted any way you want? This is supported by the BookEnds; they close the series by asking what ''your'' favourite idea of how to interpret the whole thing is.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]], possibly.

to:

** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]], reboot]] where they have to go [[HereWeGoAgain through everything again]], possibly.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* What does the ending of DHMIS 6 imply? The gang changes colors, it turns to June 20th, and then the sketchbook pops up. I can't really grasp what any of that meant. Please help.

to:

* What does the ending of DHMIS 6 imply? The gang changes colors, it turns to June 20th, and then the sketchbook pops up. I can't really grasp what any of that meant. Please help.help.
** A literal [[ContinuityReboot reboot]], possibly.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** If you're talking about how Green Guy appeared when Red Guy was pressing buttons and then turned into the solar system teacher, it also turns into Red Guy a few times. So Green Guy could be a program, but if he is then Red Guy might be a program too.

to:

** If you're talking about how Green Guy appeared when Red Guy was pressing buttons and then turned into the solar system teacher, it also turns into Red Guy a few times. So Green Guy could be a program, but if he is then Red Guy might be a program too.too.
* What does the ending of DHMIS 6 imply? The gang changes colors, it turns to June 20th, and then the sketchbook pops up. I can't really grasp what any of that meant. Please help.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** As of DHMIS 6, it's been revealed that [[spoiler: none of their "deaths" were real, as they were in a simulation.]]
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* Having watched DHMIS 6... [[spoiler: was Duck Guy a program that rebelled all this time?]]

to:

* Having watched DHMIS 6... [[spoiler: was Duck Guy a program that rebelled all this time?]]time?]]
** If you're talking about how Green Guy appeared when Red Guy was pressing buttons and then turned into the solar system teacher, it also turns into Red Guy a few times. So Green Guy could be a program, but if he is then Red Guy might be a program too.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** In light of DHMIS 6, it's possible that though Duck Guy was [[spoiler: KilledOffForReal]] in DHMIS 5, the [[spoiler: simulated world]] held on to remnants of his consciousness, evidenced by the line [[spoiler: "WHERE AM I?!"]] in DHMIS 6. You could come to the conclusion that [[spoiler: Roy]] or perhaps [[spoiler: the simulation machine itself]] was trying its hardest to spit out coherent answers but being an A.I., lacked the capacity and power to do that.

to:

** In light of DHMIS 6, it's possible that though Duck Guy was [[spoiler: KilledOffForReal]] in DHMIS 5, the [[spoiler: simulated world]] held on to remnants of his consciousness, evidenced by the line [[spoiler: "WHERE AM I?!"]] in DHMIS 6. You could come to the conclusion that [[spoiler: Roy]] or perhaps [[spoiler: the simulation machine itself]] was trying its hardest to spit out coherent answers but being an A.I., lacked the capacity and power to do that.that.
* Having watched DHMIS 6... [[spoiler: was Duck Guy a program that rebelled all this time?]]
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* In the interview with the site itsnicethat, why did most of Duck Guy's answers make no sense? He's usually the most logical of the three, so seeing him give such nonsensical answers seems rather confusing and out of character.

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* In the interview with the site itsnicethat, why did most of Duck Guy's answers make no sense? He's usually the most logical of the three, so seeing him give such nonsensical answers seems rather confusing and out of character.character.
** In light of DHMIS 6, it's possible that though Duck Guy was [[spoiler: KilledOffForReal]] in DHMIS 5, the [[spoiler: simulated world]] held on to remnants of his consciousness, evidenced by the line [[spoiler: "WHERE AM I?!"]] in DHMIS 6. You could come to the conclusion that [[spoiler: Roy]] or perhaps [[spoiler: the simulation machine itself]] was trying its hardest to spit out coherent answers but being an A.I., lacked the capacity and power to do that.
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* Why does it appear that the main characters are missing in-universe?

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* Why does it appear that the main characters are missing in-universe?in-universe?
* In the interview with the site itsnicethat, why did most of Duck Guy's answers make no sense? He's usually the most logical of the three, so seeing him give such nonsensical answers seems rather confusing and out of character.
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** I don't think it was really supposed to make sense, because that was kind of the point.The fact that so much of the video is nonsense just goes to drive Duck Guy, who is usually the puppet who favors logic and tries to make sense of things, further into anxiety until he can't take it anymore. As for the phone calls themselves, the phone was probably Red Guy's warnings about what was happening to Duck Guy and Yellow Guy. When he made Duck Guy more aware of all the inherent nonsense going on around them, he unknowingly led his friend to his death.

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** I don't think it was really supposed to make sense, because that was kind of the point.The fact that so much of the video is nonsense just goes to drive Duck Guy, who is usually the puppet who favors logic and tries to make sense of things, further into anxiety until he can't take it anymore. As for the phone calls themselves, the phone was probably Red Guy's warnings about what was happening to Duck Guy and Yellow Guy. When he made Duck Guy more aware of all the inherent nonsense going on around them, he unknowingly led his friend to his death.death.
* Why does it appear that the main characters are missing in-universe?
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** If you believe that the puppet trio are all children then this idea will not work at all, but there could be a chance that the date itself shows their ages: The red guy would be 19, making him a snarky teenager (See his behavior with the 'teachers'), the yellow guy would be 6, fitting for his immaturity and more dimwitted self, and the bird guy would be 55, which is more of a stretch but still could work as he wears a tweed suit and is in a rocking chair in DHMIS2.
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*** Tony references the picture as being "from long ago" so I'm not entirely certain if that could be so. Seventies, maybe? But then again all of the technology shown was post-Seventies and oh dear I've gone cross-eyed again. Worth mentioning, though, is that the Kickstarter video also has a timestamp of 19/06/55.

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*** Tony references the picture as being "from long ago" "far behind us" so I'm not entirely certain if that could be so. Seventies, maybe? But then again all of the technology shown was post-Seventies and oh dear I've gone cross-eyed again. Worth mentioning, though, is that the Kickstarter video also has a timestamp of 19/06/55.

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