 Item number SCP-1125 Object Class Euclid Special Containment Procedures Specimens of SCP-1125 are to be locked in opaque storage crates and kept in the SIV, Small Items Vault, at Site-12. In the event of exposure to SCP-1125 outside of testing procedures, any and all personnel bedded are to be detained and separated from SCP-1125, for application of Class A amnestics and psychological reconditioning. D-Class personnel used in testing procedures are to be given initial questions specified in Document 1125-D-REG-A-EXT-COM version 1.21. All Task Force Gamma-11, DICE jockeys, have been tasked with location and acquisition of instances of SCP-1125 outside of Foundation Control. Description SCP-1125 is a collection of individually packaged dice, with their pips replaced by the words yes, to, no, to, and maybe, to. All specimens were machined from pinewood, and had their surface treated with an unremarkable yellow dye, and a chemical sealant to prevent wear. The answers available on the dice are rendered in an MS Comic Sans font, using a dye containing traces of charcoal, a dye-stabilizing agent, and, the words the factory are found on the cardboard backing attached to each clear plastic packaging. With the company logo, an advertising slogan that reads, quote, they'll make up your mind, unquote, it's printed in bold red lettering, with a white outline. If encountered without their packaging, instances of SCP-1125 are currently indistinguishable from similar non-anomalous answer dice. In light of this, any and all similarly colored answer dice found in Foundation facilities are to be destroyed immediately without further physical contact by personnel, and all potentially compromised personnel are to submit to the application of Class A amnestics and psychological reconditioning. SCP-1125's effect becomes apparent when a specimen makes contact with the epidermis of a human being. An immediate compulsion to make use of it comes over the subject, who will phrase a query concerning a binary decision and roll SCP-1125. It then provides an answer, where it must be noted that if a roll indicates an answer or maybe, the subject will continue to roll the dye indefinitely until either an affirmative or negative answer has been generated. Subjects will unfoundly keep to the answer provided by SCP-1125, even if this would produce undesirable results. Furthermore, while initial use of the object seems to be made with trivial, sometimes even whimsical questions, testing has shown prolonged exposure to lead to increasingly critical decisions being made dependent on SCP-1125. Subjects in possession of a specimen gradually become unable to make any decision without resorting to the object, and over time, even base decisions that are not normally consciously made on the result that SCP-1125 provides them with. If challenged, subjects will not proceed just to be abnormal behavior, and will actively resist attempts to take SCP-1125 away from them. Testing has revealed that while SCP-1125 influences decisions, it does not confer abilities to the subject that it did not have before. The Site-12SIV currently holds 79 individual instances of SCP-1125, with several specimens having been removed for testing purposes. These were subsequently destroyed to prevent accidental exposure. Addendum 1125A-01 Excerpt from the transcript of Videolog 1125-DV-23 Begin Transcript Excerpt, Timestamp, July 14, 2007, 1452-31 D-43-426 enters the testing environment, where a package containing one specimen of SCP-1125 is laid out on a small metal folding table. In addition, a bed and a single chair are provided. Please open the packaging and take out the dice. Whatever you say. Subject picks up the item and examines it briefly, before tearing open the packaging. The object follows out and lands on the floor, rolling under the table. Shit! Sorry, doc. That's fine, D-43-426. Please retrieve the dice. Subject picks up the specimen. Got it. Now what? Please do as you like, D-43-426. Well, might as well roll the little sucker then. So what do I ask it? That is up to you. Anything will do as long as it's a question answerable by yes or no. Sure. Should I… Should I clap my hands? Subject rolls SCP-1125. Good. D-43-426. Now please read the answer the dice gave you. Subject leans in closer and then turns towards Dr. ████. It says yes. Subject claps his hands. Why did you do that? D-43-426. I don't know. It seemed like the thing to do. I mean, it said yes. Can I roll it again? End transcript excerpt, timestamp, July 14, 2007, 15-04-12. Begin transcript excerpt, timestamp, July 19, 2007, 9-23-01. Should I eat this then? Subject rolls SCP-1125 and quickly tears open the box of Pop-Tart provided to him. SCP-1125 is shown to indicate an answer of yes. This is the first sustenance subject has permitted himself in 18 hours. End transcript excerpt, timestamp, July 19, 2007, 9-23-51. End transcript excerpt, timestamp, July 25, 2007, 12-46-54. Should I breathe? SCP-1125 is shown to have come up maybe and subject immediately rolls it again. This second roll results in a no and subject seems to comply. Should... Subject rolls the die again. End transcript excerpt, timestamp, July 25, 2007, 12-47-16.