How Many Pages Are The Fnaf Books In Order?

2025-11-07 08:51:42 97

4 Answers

Peter
Peter
2025-11-08 12:29:59
Love that you’re cataloging these — I’ve kept a shelf specifically for FNaF reprints and weird editions, so I’ll give you a compact list in release order with typical page counts (always remember that different publishers and releases change the number a little): 'The Silver Eyes' — roughly 320–352 pages; 'The Twisted Ones' — roughly 320–360 pages; 'The Fourth Closet' — roughly 360–400 pages. After those come the 'Fazbear Frights' volumes (1 through 12) — each usually lands around 140–170 pages because they’re short-story anthologies. Then 'Tales from the Pizzaplex' volumes, similar at about 150–180 pages apiece. For reference, 'The Freddy Files' and related guides tend to be shorter reference books, typically between 120 and 200 pages. That should help you order them on a reading list or shelf—my copy of 'The Twisted Ones' has a different page count than the library’s paperback, so double-check if you need absolute precision.
Theo
Theo
2025-11-08 14:00:16
What a satisfying rabbit hole — I’ve cataloged these for a friend’s collection, so here’s a more narrative rundown that explains why page counts wobble. First, the story novels: 'The Silver Eyes', 'The Twisted Ones', and 'The Fourth Closet' are the core trilogy and are each novel-length (usually in the low-to-mid 300s of pages). The exact counts depend on whether you’re looking at the original independent releases or later Scholastic/retail paperbacks, which sometimes add forewords, extra artwork, or different font/layout that shifts totals by a few dozen pages.

Second, a huge chunk of the franchise is anthologies: 'Fazbear Frights' (twelve volumes) and 'Tales from the Pizzaplex' (several volumes) — these are short-story collections and most commonly sit between 140 and 180 pages. Lastly, the companion books like 'The Freddy Files' and the various activity/logbook tie-ins are smaller, typically 120–200 pages depending on whether they include bonus content. I always advise checking the ISBN or publisher page if you need an exact number for a specific edition — otherwise expect those ballpark figures. I enjoy flipping between the longer novels and the bite-sized fright tales depending on my mood.
Jade
Jade
2025-11-10 03:20:56
Love this question — I’m always nerding out over the book formats and page counts for the 'Five Nights at Freddy's' releases. If you want the main novel trilogy in release order, here's a quick breakdown with typical page ranges because editions vary:

'Silver Eyes' — about 320–352 pages (first print and later paperbacks differ a bit). 'the twisted ones' — roughly 320–360 pages. 'The Fourth Closet' — tends to be a touch longer, around 360–400 pages depending on the edition and whether it's a US Scholastic printing or a later reprint.

Beyond the trilogy, there’s a much larger family of tie-ins: the 'fazbear frights' anthology series (volumes 1–12) generally run about 130–170 pages each since they’re short-story collections. The 'Tales from the Pizzaplex' miniseries follows a similar pattern at around 150–180 pages per volume. the companion guides like 'The Freddy Files' and the 'Survival Logbook' are shorter — often in the 120–200 page range depending on special editions. I always keep a stack on my shelf and love spotting the tiny differences between printings.
Eleanor
Eleanor
2025-11-12 10:10:19
This is a fun hunt — short and useful: in release order for the main books, 'The Silver Eyes', 'The Twisted Ones', and 'The Fourth Closet' each generally fall in the ~320–400 page range depending on edition. The 'Fazbear Frights' anthology volumes are usually around 130–170 pages each, while 'Tales from the Pizzaplex' volumes tend to be about 150–180 pages. Companion books like 'The Freddy Files' or themed activity/logbooks are shorter, often between 120–200 pages. Editions, publishers, and special prints will change those numbers slightly, but those ranges will get your collection lined up nicely — I personally love the compact anthologies for late-night reading.
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