This is a page for all the Easter Eggs found through out the 123 Slaughter Me Street Series. While these are primarily found in the Spin off Titles, These were first introduced in 123 Slaughter Me Street Retro.
Most of these Easter eggs can be found in the level or maps of the games, but some of them requires something to be done or has a random chance of occurring in certain levels (like the Pink Follower). Only a small handful of these Easter eggs also double as achievements in the cases of 123 Slaughter Me Street 2 and Slaughter Me Street: 1999 on Steam.
List of Easter Eggs[]
Pinky/ Pink Follower[]
Pinky, known previously as Pink Follower is a Reoccurring Easter egg that can be found primarily in Spin Offs. She is simply a color swap of Wollof, Having mostly pink fur with a purple belly. In select games her appearances differ from Wollof in other ways, In Super Retro she has different colored horns in her jumpscare, and in 1999 she has no visible pupils. Their origins are based off of a bug that would happen in early builds of 123 Slaughter Me Street where the Follower would appear without textures, resulting in a Pink appearance. They are the first Easter egg character capable of killing the player due to them merely being a reskin of a threat.
Retro series[]
The Pink Follower can be activated in both games by tapping the word "Retro" around 50 times in the original Retro (The player will know when they activated it when the screen shows the Nightmare briefly) and several times in Super Retro (The player will know when the Follower will walk onto the screen off the side of the Menu. Tap him to change the colors). Both of these can be reversed by repeating the same process.
Slaughter Me Street: 1999[]
The Pink Follower (now named Pinky) can rarely appear in any level that the Follower is active in. Having a 1/200 chance of replacing the Follower every time the creature is spawned in. She also appears in a challenge level called The Eight Tokens, Making her the only Rare Easter egg in 1999 to have a guaranteed chance of appearing should the player be able to unlock the challenge. Interestingly in the challenge she appears in, She is referred to as a male, Likely due to her being a recolor of Wollof.
Interestingly, in The Eight Tokens challenge specifically, she functions differently from the Follower in the base game being capable of teleporting a lot more, being much faster and not being able to be stunned by the flashlight. In every other instance of her outside of this one exception she functions exactly like Follower.
Will Ryan Mask[]
In the original 123 Slaughter Me Street Retro game, there is a secret cosmetic that could not be bought in the store nor can be accessed there. To get this, the player must go to the credits and tap on Will Ryan's name around 10 times. Like the Pink Follower Easter egg, the players will know they got it if the Nightmare is shown on screen briefly. Once the player enters a level they'll have a Will Ryan Mask. Similar to the other Easter egg, this can be toggled on and off by repeating the process.
Fluffy Town[]
Fluffy Town is a piece of fan art that was featured in 123 Slaughter Me Street 2 that featured "cute" stylized versions of the main cast from 123 Slaughter Me Street 1. The fan art itself can be found on the wall of the workshop, Finding this will give the player an achievement called "FluffyTown Express".
Dev Photo[]
A Photo of the Devs can be found in 123 Slaughter Me Street 2. This photo can be found in the left door where the player spawn, located in one of the restrooms to the side of the toilet. Finding this will give the player an achievement called "Say Hello Developers".
The Yeti[]
The Yeti is a character that can rarely appear in place of the Seeker if he is active in a level. Having a 1/200 chance of replacing the Seeker every time the demon is spawned in. Similar to Pinky, The Yeti is a color swap, being a white version of Seeker that lacks the red pupils. He is the second character reskin to actually be capable of killing the player and was created as a equivalent to Pinky for the game.
Seekar[]
Seekar is a community meme that got voted in to Slaughter Me Street: 1999, being added in Demo V 1.0.7. As the name may suggest, it is a Seeker shaped like a car sharing similar textures to the Seeker model in 1999 and having horns and ears added onto the model of the vehicle in the basement. While not normally seen it also has an unusually fleshy underside.
Rarely, in The House map, the car located in the garage has a rare chance to be replaced by the Car-shaped Seeker. Having a 1/200 chance of replacing this car whenever the House map is loaded. This is the only rare Easter egg that appears in 1999 that can not harm the player in any way, being merely a cosmetic change. Similar to Yeti with Seeker, there's also a version of Seekar that uses the Yeti's textures as well, However this requires two separate numbers to be hit at the same time, both a 1/200 and 1/2000.
Gomex[]
Gomex is a community joke character, being a recolored version of Gomez's model replacing most of his warm colors with cool colors. This character can be seen in both workshops of the House and Studio levels as a texture and a model respectively. While the model in the studio is the same as Gomez's model, it will not attack the player and is simply part of the environment.
Midnight Evil[]
Midnight Evil is another game developed by IGS Studios. A couple of Easter eggs relating to Slaughter Me Street has appeared in this game:
- Figures of Follower, Greeter, Waiter, and Hunter.
- A nightlight with Follower's likeness
- A license plate that reads "123 SMS"
and some assets were reused from Midnight Evil for Slaughter Me Street: 1999 alongside some new Easter Eggs:
- The Otori, This console appears as a Relic in the main gameplay of 1999.
- The Urklings (Gulos, Vigos, and Ralos), The main threats and antagonists of Midnight Evil appear as lifeless props in the Studio level.
- Several parody posters from the player's (William Grinkle's) bedroom appears in the Studio level.
Retro Sprites[]
In the House level, If the player goes to the workshop among the shelf of recolored puppets are the sprites of the Follower, Greeter, and Waiter from 123 Slaughter Me Street Retro.
Original Nightmare[]
The original design for the Nightmare first seen in the ending of 123 Slaughter Me Street can be seen physically in the workshop area of The Studio.
Old Follower[]
The original model for the Follower used in the first two Slaughter Me Street games can be found in a much lower poly slouched on a counter in the workshop area of The Studio.
Sy Mask[]
In the Studio's workshop, a mask can be found on the wall. This mask is an Easter egg based on a member in the community that completed the House demo on slaughter difficulty with tank controls before the full game was fully released.
Gallery[]
Trivia[]
- Despite Easter Eggs being commonly found in the Spin-Off titles, an early Evolutions Trailer showed off that the Pink Follower would also appear in the game likely functioning as an Easter egg once again. While development has since changed a lot on how the early trailer looked and functioned, it may be possible the character will still appear, but this has not been confirmed.
- The Seekar Easter egg is the first community meme to appear in an official Slaughter Me Street game.
- Currently, All of the rare Easter eggs are based off of the Follower or Seeker, as are most of the Easter eggs that can jumpscare the player.
- In Midnight Evil, two of the Easter eggs found in that game uses the old Evolutions designs of Follower, Greeter, Waiter, and Hunter prior to the models being replaced. Although these models are much lower poly. This also applies to the nightlight that has the Follower's head.
- The Challenge that features the Pink Follower is a reference to Slender and the Eight Pages and potentially Slendytubbies.
- In 1999, Any instance of Follower or Seeker has a chance to be replaced by Pinky and the Yeti Respectively, This includes areas that are not levels such as the title screen where any threat has a chance to appear at the end of the hallway.
