The Woods Have Taken Her Plantsvscunts — Essential & Premium

(See also HDL-SCHEM-Editor for VHDL and Verilog)

HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design

Features:

Advantages:

Prerequisites:

The Woods Have Taken Her Plantsvscunts — Essential & Premium

: Because each episode or volume introduces a new setting (ranging from ancient Japanese forests to laboratories contaminated by mutated seeds), entries like "The Woods Have Taken Her" function effectively as standalone shorts. Viewers do not need overarching lore to understand the stakes; the primal fear of the dark woods combined with high-production animation delivers immediate narrative payoff.

The aesthetic of phrases like "the woods have taken her" aligns perfectly with the boom of analog horror channels on platforms like YouTube. These series often mimic lost VHS tapes, emergency broadcast alerts, and local news segments from the 1980s and 1990s.

The pronoun "her" implies a specific individual, creating an immediate emotional hook and a sense of personal loss.

The prompt leaves the exact fate of the character to the imagination, hinting at assimilation, corruption, or tragic loss.

HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design HDL-FSM-Editor window showing an example design

Here you can find links to several designs which I have created.
All designs are created by HDL-SCHEM-Editor and HDL-FSM-Editor and all designs are based at VHDL (only for division also Verilog is available).
By the link you will find all the needed source-files for both tools and also the generated VHDL/Verilog-files.

  1. Cordic module
  2. multiplication module
  3. multiplication module with carry-save adders (CS)
  4. multiplication module with signed digit adders (SD)
  5. multiplication module with binary stored-carry adders (BSC)
  6. multiplication module with Wallace tree (WT)
  7. multiplication module with Wallace tree and Booth encoding (WT_BOOTH)
  8. Karatsuba multiplication module
  9. division module
  10. division module at signed numbers
  11. SRT division module
  12. square module
  13. Cordic square-root module
  14. square-root module
  15. Uart
  16. Fifo
  17. clock-divider module
  18. AHB Multi-Layer Bus
  19. AHB to APB bridge

1. The Cordic module "rotate":


2. The multiplication module "multiply":


3. The multiplication module "multiply_cs":


4. The multiplication module "multiply_sd":


5. The multiplication module "multiply_bsc":


6. The multiplication module "multiply_wt":


7. The multiplication module "multiply_wt_booth":


8. The Karatsuba multiplication module "multiply_karatsuba":


9. The non restoring division module "division":


10. The non restoring division module "division_signed":


11. The SRT division module "division_srt_radix2":


12. The square module "square":


13. The Cordic square-root module "cordic_square_root":


14. The square-root module "square_root":


15. The Uart module "uart":


16. The Fifo module "fifo":


17. The clock-divider module "clock_divider":


18. The AHB Multi-Layer Bus module "ahb_multilayer":


19. The AHB to APB bridge module "ahb_apb_bridge":

: Because each episode or volume introduces a new setting (ranging from ancient Japanese forests to laboratories contaminated by mutated seeds), entries like "The Woods Have Taken Her" function effectively as standalone shorts. Viewers do not need overarching lore to understand the stakes; the primal fear of the dark woods combined with high-production animation delivers immediate narrative payoff.

The aesthetic of phrases like "the woods have taken her" aligns perfectly with the boom of analog horror channels on platforms like YouTube. These series often mimic lost VHS tapes, emergency broadcast alerts, and local news segments from the 1980s and 1990s.

The pronoun "her" implies a specific individual, creating an immediate emotional hook and a sense of personal loss.

The prompt leaves the exact fate of the character to the imagination, hinting at assimilation, corruption, or tragic loss.

If you detect any bugs or have any questions,
please send a mail to "matthias.schweikart@gmx.de".