To turn this from a silly news show into a horror game, you need "Jumpscare" logic.
“Uh… technical difficulties?” Tom mumbled, tapping the tablet again. Instead of a laugh track, a deep, guttural static erupted from the speakers. The main monitor, which usually displayed their viewer count, glitched violently. A single, handwritten line of code scrawled across the screen: talking tom and ben news scratch the joy of creation
Unlike coding in a vacuum, Scratch is a social network for creators. Once a child finishes their "Breaking News" episode (featuring Tom interviewing a dragon, or Ben losing his mind over a floating banana), they hit "Share." To turn this from a silly news show
Scratch is built on a "remix" license. If you see a Talking Tom and Ben News project you like, you can click "See inside," steal the code, change the dialogue, and republish it as your own (with credit). This destroys the myth of the "lonely genius." A 12-year-old in Brazil can remix a project started by a 10-year-old in India. They change the news script to a local joke, swap the background to a school, and suddenly, Tom and Ben are speaking to a new culture. The joy here is communal—building on the shoulders of other creators. The main monitor, which usually displayed their viewer