Guides

Animal Hospital Roblox Anomalies: Symptom Checker

GuidesAnimal HospitalRobloxAnomaliesSymptom Checker2026
Animal Hospital Roblox clinic security view used to check an animal patient

Quick Answer

To identify an anomaly in Animal Hospital Roblox, check the patient in three passes: appearance at reception, the fully developed patient photo, and security-camera footage. Search the symptom checker below for the clue you saw. Static Photo is a check-again signal, not automatic proof of a Mimic.

Version focus 18-signal checker for the live Roblox build, checked July 17, 2026

Anomaly Symptom Checker

Start With Where The Signal Appeared

Search the cue, filter the viewing method, then use the next check before treatment. The tool avoids instant certainty when one more view is safer.

18 current signals
  1. 1LookFace, eyes, ears, posture, movement.
  2. 2WaitLet the patient photo fully develop.
  3. 3CompareUse CCTV before admitting an uncertain case.
Where did you see it?
What changed?

18 signals shownSave uncertain cues for the current shift.

Appearance

Smiling with Creepy Eyes

Strong signal

The patient has oversized dark eyes, heavy eye bags, and a wide drawn-on smile.

  • The voice may sound lower or distorted.
  • The smile can change after the patient is stunned.

Check nextHold the shutter and compare the same face in the processed photo or CCTV view.

Safe actionDo not admit the patient while the face is clearly different from a normal model.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Appearance

Three Eyes

Strong signal

Three glowing or mismatched eyes replace, overlap, or sit in front of the normal eyes.

  • The original eyes may still be visible behind the extra set.
  • The face can be easier to read when the patient stops moving.

Check nextCompare eye count at the window and in the photo before accepting the patient.

Safe actionKeep the reception barrier closed once the extra eye is visible in a stable view.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Appearance

Crooked Face

Strong signal

The face has a crooked sharp-toothed smile and mismatched eyes placed unusually high.

  • The eyes stay visibly three-dimensional across expressions.
  • The mouth shape is much harsher than a normal patient face.

Check nextPause the check-in and compare the eye placement in another view.

Safe actionUse the shutter rather than treating the distorted face as a normal expression.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Appearance

X-rayed Face

Strong signal

Small wide eyes and exposed realistic-looking teeth replace the normal patient face.

  • The teeth read more like an X-ray or skull than a normal mouth.
  • The eye shape stays unusually round and fixed.

Check nextUse the processed photo to make sure the face is not a brief animation or camera angle.

Safe actionKeep the patient outside once the altered face remains visible across views.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Appearance

Staring

Watch recovery

The patient's head keeps tracking a player or camera instead of following normal idle movement.

  • The stare can be subtle at the window.
  • A camera view may make the tracking direction easier to notice.

Check nextMove the viewing angle, then confirm whether the head keeps following the same player or camera.

Safe actionDo not rush the admission; use CCTV if the window movement is hard to read.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Appearance

Hollow Face

Watch recovery

The patient has dark hollow eyes, a hunched posture, and repeated twitching.

  • The posture is as important as the eye shape.
  • The patient may not become hostile immediately.

Check nextConfirm the hollow eyes and body posture together, then keep recovery under observation.

Safe actionReject the clearly altered patient or keep a dedicated safety watch if it is already inside.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Appearance

Twitching

Watch recovery

The arms, head, or neck jerk repeatedly while the back appears hunched or stretched.

  • The neck may look longer during the movement.
  • Some versions are easier to see through security cameras.

Check nextWatch one full idle cycle, then compare the body movement on CCTV.

Safe actionKeep the shutter closed while you decide whether the movement is window-only or camera-only.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Patient photo

Incorrect Photo

Strong signal

The developed photo does not match the patient at the window.

  • Check eyes, ear shape, ear color, mouth, and the overall face.
  • Compare one feature at a time instead of relying on a general feeling.

Check nextHold the photo beside the window view, then use CCTV if the mismatch is still small.

Safe actionKeep the patient outside when a stable body feature changes between the window and photo.

If missed A small photo mismatch can be the only early warning before the patient is admitted.

Patient photo

Static Photo

Check one more view

The processed photo has a grainy or static-covered effect.

  • Static alone does not prove a Mimic.
  • Look for another altered feature or a camera-only signal before deciding.

Check nextWait for the photo to finish, inspect the patient again, and compare the security camera.

Safe actionUse the shutter while checking again; do not turn one static image into an instant attack decision.

If missed Treating static as certainty can cost a normal patient, while ignoring added clues can admit a threat.

Patient photo

Cursed Photo

Strong signal

The finished photo shows an impossible face, hollow eyes, exposed teeth, or another disturbing portrait.

  • Do not judge the sheet before it finishes processing.
  • Picking it up too early can drain sanity.

Check nextLet the image fully develop, then compare the face with the patient and security view.

Safe actionKeep the shutter closed and avoid handling the print early while the image is still forming.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Security camera

Black Eyes

Strong signal

CCTV shows a dark bar or blacked-out face with realistic eyes staring through it.

  • The window and photo may look normal.
  • Pause on a clear camera angle before switching rooms.

Check nextReturn to the window once, then confirm that the altered eyes remain camera-only.

Safe actionClose the shutter when the camera repeatedly shows a face that is absent at reception.

If missed Camera-only clues disappear once the patient is admitted and moving through treatment rooms.

Security camera

Unnatural Body

Strong signal

The body appears stretched, boneless, or heavily distorted only on CCTV.

  • The shape may change after closing and reopening the camera.
  • A held photo can also look distorted through the CCTV screen.

Check nextSwitch away and return to the same camera to see whether the body changes again.

Safe actionReject the patient once the camera repeatedly shows an impossible body shape.

If missed The normal window model can hide a strong camera-only threat until it is already inside.

Security camera

Staring at Cameras

Watch recovery

The patient keeps looking directly into the CCTV lens while walking or waiting.

  • The head follows the camera position rather than the path of travel.
  • The behavior can be clearer in the lobby view.

Check nextChange camera angle and confirm that the patient's gaze follows the lens again.

Safe actionKeep the patient outside while the camera-tracking behavior remains repeatable.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Security camera

Void / Black

Strong signal

The entire patient model appears black on CCTV while the window view remains normal.

  • Check more than one camera if the room lighting is poor.
  • The effect should follow the patient rather than the background.

Check nextCompare a second camera or brighter angle to rule out a dark room or blocked lens.

Safe actionUse the shutter once the black model follows the patient across a clear camera view.

If missed Admitting the patient removes the safe reception barrier between the clue and your team.

Security camera

Camera Twitching

Watch recovery

The patient twitches on CCTV even though the window and photo look calm.

  • Watch long enough to separate twitching from a single walk animation.
  • The movement can involve the head, arms, or upper body.

Check nextHold the camera view through one full idle cycle, then compare the reception model.

Safe actionKeep the shutter closed while the camera-only movement is being confirmed.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Security camera

Disguised Mimic

Strong signal

The patient appears normal at reception but shows a Mimic-like body or mouth on CCTV.

  • A side view from the lobby camera can be easier to read.
  • The disguised form may twitch after reaching the check-in spot.

Check nextUse a second camera angle and compare the silhouette, mouth, and movement together.

Safe actionClose the shutter when the Mimic form remains visible on a clear camera pass.

If missed A missed signal can create danger after check-in. Reveal event detail only when you want the spoiler.

Security camera

Mismatching Ears

Strong signal

The ears or horns on CCTV differ from the patient standing at the window.

  • Compare shape before color.
  • Use the same side of the head in both views.

Check nextReturn to reception, note the exact ear shape, then reopen the clearest camera angle.

Safe actionReject the patient when the ear structure changes between stable views.

If missed A small anatomy mismatch may be the only visible clue before treatment starts.

Security camera

Mismatching Face

Strong signal

The face on CCTV differs from the face at the window or on the developed photo.

  • Eye shape and mouth position are the fastest comparison points.
  • A side camera may be too blurry; use the clearest available angle.

Check nextCompare one facial feature at a time across the window, photo, and camera.

Safe actionKeep the patient outside when the face mismatch survives a second camera check.

If missed The patient may look normal again once movement and room pressure make the face harder to inspect.

Animal Hospital anomalies are easiest to miss when players treat one view as the whole answer. A normal reception model does not clear the patient, and a strange photo effect does not always prove the patient is dangerous. Use the symptom checker above to turn a visible clue into a next check and a safe action.

The first version covers 18 practical signals: seven visible at reception, three found in patient photos, and eight checked through security cameras. It stays focused on the screening job rather than expanding into a full enemy or event encyclopedia.

How To Check A Patient In Three Passes

Start every screening decision with the same order.

  1. Appearance: inspect the face, eye count, ears, posture, and movement at the reception window.
  2. Photo: wait until the patient photo has completely developed, then compare one feature at a time.
  3. Security camera: check CCTV for forms, movement, eyes, ears, or faces that do not appear at the window.

Keep the shutter closed while those views disagree. If a clue appears for only one animation frame, wait for another idle cycle or switch camera angle. Strong decisions come from a stable feature, a repeatable movement, or a clear mismatch between views.

Search the checker with ordinary words. Eyes, face, ears, body, twitching, static, photo, and camera all narrow the list. Channel tabs answer where the clue appeared; cue chips answer what changed.

Appearance Signals

The seven Appearance rows cover Smiling with Creepy Eyes, Three Eyes, Crooked Face, X-rayed Face, Staring, Hollow Face, and Twitching.

Face changes such as an extra eye, exposed teeth, a fixed unnatural smile, or hollow eye sockets are usually easier to read when the patient stops moving. Movement clues need more patience. A head that tracks the player, repeated neck jerks, or a hunched twitching posture should be watched through a full idle cycle before the patient is admitted.

Use the checker to separate two decisions:

What you seeNext move
Clear altered face across a stable reception viewKeep the shutter closed and compare the photo or camera before opening the route
Possible stare or twitchChange your viewing angle and confirm that the movement repeats
Hollow face plus unusual postureTreat the combined face and body cue as more important than either clue alone

Do not step away from reception merely because the patient stops moving for a moment. The safer route is to finish the comparison while the barrier is still closed.

Photo Signals

The photo group covers Incorrect Photo, Static Photo, and Cursed Photo.

Incorrect Photo is a feature-matching problem. Hold the finished image against the patient and compare eyes, ear shape, ear color, mouth, and overall face. A small but stable ear or face mismatch can be the only warning before admission.

Cursed Photo is a stronger visual warning: the developed image may show an impossible face, hollow eyes, exposed teeth, or another disturbing portrait. Let the print finish before handling it. The important action is not to rush a forming image while the patient is still safely behind the shutter.

Static Photo needs a different response. It belongs in the Check one more view state because static alone does not identify the exact patient type. Use it as a reason to slow down and look for another altered feature.

Security Camera Signals

The eight Security Camera rows cover Black Eyes, Unnatural Body, Staring at Cameras, Void / Black, Camera Twitching, Disguised Mimic, Mismatching Ears, and Mismatching Face.

CCTV matters because a patient can look normal at the window and still appear altered on camera. Pause on a clear angle and make sure the effect follows the patient rather than the room lighting, a blocked lens, or the edge of the screen.

Camera clues fall into three useful groups:

  • Face and eye changes: blacked-out eyes or a face that no longer matches reception.
  • Body and movement changes: a stretched body, void-black model, repeated twitching, or a gaze that follows the camera.
  • Disguise mismatches: ears, face, mouth, or body form that only reveal themselves in CCTV.

When possible, switch away and return to the same camera. A repeatable impossible body or mismatched face is safer to act on than a single dark frame.

Static Photo And Other False-Confidence Traps

The most dangerous confidence mistake is turning one unclear sign into a complete diagnosis. Static Photo may accompany a dangerous patient, but the static effect by itself is not permission to skip the rest of the check.

Use this order:

  1. Let the photo finish.
  2. Keep the shutter closed.
  3. Look for a changed eye, ear, mouth, or face.
  4. Compare CCTV from a readable angle.
  5. Admit only when the patient remains consistent, or reject when a strong altered feature is confirmed.

The opposite mistake is also costly: dismissing an odd photo because the window looks normal. A photo or camera mismatch exists precisely because one view may hide the clue.

What To Do When The Views Disagree

Do not average the views into “probably fine.” Identify the exact disagreement and check it once more.

DisagreementSafe check
Window normal, photo differentCompare one facial or ear feature, then open CCTV
Window normal, CCTV alteredChange camera angle and confirm the effect follows the patient
Photo static, other views normalWait, inspect the completed print, and repeat the camera pass
Window movement odd, photo normalWatch a full idle cycle through CCTV
Patient already admitted after a doubtful checkKeep recovery under observation and keep the route clear

The Saved Watch List is useful when several patients are moving through the hospital. Save the clue rather than relying on memory, then remove it after the patient has been safely resolved.

Recovery-Stage Risks

Some signals matter after check-in because the patient may reveal more during treatment or recovery. Rows marked Watch recovery are not invitations to admit a doubtful patient. They tell you where the danger can move if the early clue was missed or the patient is already inside.

Keep one player watching recovery in a team. Solo players should return after treatment instead of assuming the case is complete. If the earlier window, photo, and camera checks did not agree, do not leave that room unwatched while starting another admission.

Spoiler-light mode hides named later-event detail and keeps the tool focused on general risk. Turn it off only when you want the more specific consequence text. The preference stays in this browser.

Common Mistakes

  • Picking up or judging the photo before it fully develops.
  • Checking only the window and skipping CCTV.
  • Treating Static Photo as automatic proof of a Mimic.
  • Mistaking a dark room or blocked angle for a void-black patient.
  • Watching only one animation frame instead of a full idle cycle.
  • Firing, treating, or opening the route from one uncertain clue.
  • Forgetting a doubtful patient after treatment begins.
  • Letting two teammates make separate shutter or treatment decisions.

When uncertainty remains, close the barrier and repeat the check. The tool’s safe actions favor confirmation and shutter control; they do not recommend a wrong treatment or an instant attack as the default answer.

Return To The Animal Hospital Hub

Open the Animal Hospital Roblox guide hub for the saved First Shift Checklist, the Shift 1 to Shift 2 unlock route, tutorial treatments, and the solo/team work order. Use the hub before a new run, then return here when a specific face, photo, ear, body, or camera clue appears.

FAQ

How do you tell if a patient is an anomaly in Animal Hospital Roblox?

Compare the patient in three passes: appearance at reception, the fully developed photo, and security-camera footage. Look for a repeatable mismatch in the face, eyes, ears, body, or movement before admitting the patient.

Does a Static Photo always mean an anomaly or Mimic?

No. Static Photo is a check-again signal. Keep the shutter closed, wait for the image to finish, inspect the patient again, and use CCTV for another clue before deciding.

Can a patient look normal at the window but be abnormal on camera?

Yes. Black Eyes, Void or Black, Unnatural Body, camera-only twitching, mismatched ears, mismatched faces, and disguised forms can be clearer on CCTV than at reception.

Why should you wait for the patient photo to finish?

A forming photo can be misleading, and handling a dangerous print early can cost sanity. Let it develop, then compare specific facial and ear features with the patient.

What is the safest move when you are not sure?

Keep the shutter closed and repeat the three-pass check. Use another camera angle or wait for the photo rather than admitting the patient, firing, or applying a treatment based on one uncertain clue.