Foley artists adore the E936. The act of screwing the collar produces a distinctive, satisfying clack-shush sound—a metallic ratchet followed by a rubber seal compression. This sound has been sampled widely, appearing in video games like Death Stranding when connecting chiral network terminals, and in the film Tenet during reverse-entropy machine calibrations.
With the resurgence of cyberpunk in shows like Altered Carbon and Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, designers sought objects that conveyed high-power, dangerous energy. The E936’s thick collar and locking mechanism scream "industrial caution." It visually implies that whatever is being plugged in carries lethal voltage or critical data.
SCP-936 appears in several community-made mods and standalone fan games, though it is less prominent than "The Sculpture" (SCP-173) or "The Old Man" (SCP-106).
Foley artists adore the E936. The act of screwing the collar produces a distinctive, satisfying clack-shush sound—a metallic ratchet followed by a rubber seal compression. This sound has been sampled widely, appearing in video games like Death Stranding when connecting chiral network terminals, and in the film Tenet during reverse-entropy machine calibrations.
With the resurgence of cyberpunk in shows like Altered Carbon and Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, designers sought objects that conveyed high-power, dangerous energy. The E936’s thick collar and locking mechanism scream "industrial caution." It visually implies that whatever is being plugged in carries lethal voltage or critical data.
SCP-936 appears in several community-made mods and standalone fan games, though it is less prominent than "The Sculpture" (SCP-173) or "The Old Man" (SCP-106).