Once upon a time in the land of Pac, there once was a giant yellow creature named Puck-Man. He had a giant nose and would constantly be forced to run through complex mazes whenever he wanted to eat. Four ghosts always followed him, teasing him and hoping they could get a chance to eat Puck-Man.
The ghosts were always very cruel when they teased him. They usually teased him about his nose or about the fact that if you replace on letter in the word Puck-Man, you get a very hurtful name to call Puck-Man. Now, Puck-Man did not want to hurt anybody. He wanted to eat and be left alone. But it was never so.
As Puck-Man got older, he decided he wanted to have kids because he was aging, and it would be difficult for him to continue the constant chases and torment the ghosts put him in.
Unbeknownst to the teller of the story, two little Puck-Men were born. Puck-Man decided to name one Pac, after the wonderful land he lived in, and the other K.C. He raised them on a steady diet of strained dots and strawberry juice.
The little Pucks got bigger and stronger as they got older. Pac-Man and K.C-Man loved each other as brothers. They would chase each other in preparation for the difficult lives they would have to lead when they got older.
One day, when the little Pucks got home, they could not find their father. Worried, as they had never been alone to fight their own battles, they searched high and low for Puck-Man. And they could not find him. They looked inside mazes, under rocks, on treetops and on the bridge. No Puck-Man. The brothers were very afraid. What if the ghosts had eaten their father? Then what would they do? They were still young.
K.C. decided it would be a good idea to search Pac-Land's buildings and see if his father was there. And together, they went off, in search of their father.
The ghosts were always very cruel when they teased him. They usually teased him about his nose or about the fact that if you replace on letter in the word Puck-Man, you get a very hurtful name to call Puck-Man. Now, Puck-Man did not want to hurt anybody. He wanted to eat and be left alone. But it was never so.
As Puck-Man got older, he decided he wanted to have kids because he was aging, and it would be difficult for him to continue the constant chases and torment the ghosts put him in.
Unbeknownst to the teller of the story, two little Puck-Men were born. Puck-Man decided to name one Pac, after the wonderful land he lived in, and the other K.C. He raised them on a steady diet of strained dots and strawberry juice.
The little Pucks got bigger and stronger as they got older. Pac-Man and K.C-Man loved each other as brothers. They would chase each other in preparation for the difficult lives they would have to lead when they got older.
One day, when the little Pucks got home, they could not find their father. Worried, as they had never been alone to fight their own battles, they searched high and low for Puck-Man. And they could not find him. They looked inside mazes, under rocks, on treetops and on the bridge. No Puck-Man. The brothers were very afraid. What if the ghosts had eaten their father? Then what would they do? They were still young.
K.C. decided it would be a good idea to search Pac-Land's buildings and see if his father was there. And together, they went off, in search of their father.
