Cutie Her Uncle -v1.1.0- -freakbunny- Apr 2026

Cutie is not his real niece. Her name is Lena. She is twelve, with tangled hair and a gap-toothed smile, and she arrived three months ago, placed by a state system that had run out of options. She calls him Uncle Jack because he said "Mister feels too lonely, and Dad would be a lie we shouldn't start with."

The "Freakbunny" aesthetic is intentional. The unnatural (mechanical jackalopes, a home in a silo) highlights the natural human need for connection. The story informs because it shows, not tells: healing is not a lightning bolt. It is a warm joint. It is a Tuesday at 4 PM. It is a girl naming a robot rabbit "Captain Whiskers the Unreliable" and an uncle who doesn't laugh, but nods, and hands her the next resistor. Cutie Her Uncle -v1.1.0- -Freakbunny-

Next build will explore the first time Lena winds a jackalope. Preliminary title: "The Voicebox." Estimate: two pages of dialogue, no resolution. Just her finger turning the key. And the sound of someone she lost, saying something small and unforgettable. Cutie is not his real niece

v1.1.0 works because it understands that "Cutie" is not a story about fixing a broken child or a grieving man. It's a story about parallel repairs. He cannot give her back her mother. She cannot erase his regret. But they can build something new in the space between—a workshop, a set of protocols, a shared language of resistors and red wires. She calls him Uncle Jack because he said

Freakbunny Interactive • A Narrative Design Document

The first thing you notice about Uncle Jack is his hands. They are large, perpetually smudged with graphite or solder, and they move with the precision of a watchmaker. He lives in a converted silo on the edge of the reclaimed wetlands, a place the locals call "the Freakbunny Warren"—not out of malice, but because of the jackalopes he cultivates. Not real ones, of course. Mechanical ones. His specialty.

From: Lead Narrative Designer To: Team