The scary thread

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teqrevisited

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Damn. Some of these are really quite horrifying. I know the Slender Man isn't real but the concept of him just seems to chill me to the bone.

The scariest thing I've experienced probably pales in comparison but here it is anyway.

It had just turned into the New Year 2010 and my cousin, a friend and I were walking into town to get something to eat. My cousin insisted we walk down the rural paths, through all of the farm fields, as it was much faster this way. About 5 minutes had passed since we left the last house behind when we started hearing something coming from the field on our left.

Something in the field felt the need to breathe heavily. It almost sounded deliberate and we each turned to face one another to make sure that the sound wasn't a trick being played on the other two. The sound stopped and we joked about it; mocking it's effect on us.

How very wrong we were to laugh. The sound returned. This time it became heavier and it had begun gurgling. This time we were properly afraid. We'd left the glow of the houses & streetlights well behind us by now; our only option was to walk faster. Almost in response to this, the sound changed.

Instead of what sounded like the dying, gurgling breath of a man it had started to wail and moan. This was far too much. We didn't stop running until all we could hear was our own breathlesness and the relative silence of the night.

I don't know what it was that made that noise in the field that night and I don't know if I want to know what it was. All I know is that we definitely will not be walking down that road again.
 

David_G

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OK, I might as well contribute myself:


"Daddy, I had a bad dream."

You blink your eyes and pull up on your elbows. Your clock glows red in the darkness ? it's 3:23. "Do you want to climb into bed and tell me about it?"

"No, Daddy."

The oddness of the situation wakes you up more fully. You can barely make out your daughter's pale form in the darkness of your room. "Why not sweetie?"

"Because in my dream, when I told you about the dream, the thing wearing Mommy's skin sat up."

For a moment, you feel paralyzed; you can't take your eyes off of your daughter. The covers behind you begin to shift.
 

DanDeFool

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This XCKD strip always creeps me the fuck out.

http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/google_maps.png


Do not wake the Straw Man...
 

topbloke

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SHIT... that middle photo is taken in a suburb of Perth, Australia. The city i live in... im scared now
MercurySteam said:
See if you can spot The Slender Man in these photos:

 

Tekkawarrior

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Pararaptor said:


I want to start off by saying if you want an answer at the end, prepare to be disappointed. There just isn't one.

I was an intern at Nickelodeon Studios for a year in 2005 for my degree in animation. It wasn't paid of course, most internships aren't, but it did have some perks beyond education. To adults it might not seem like a big one, but most kids at the time would shit themselves over it. Since I worked directly with the editors and animators, I got to view the new episodes days before they aired.

I'll get right to it without giving too many unnecessary details. They had very recently made the Spongebob movie and the entire staff was somewhat sapped of creativity so it took them longer to start up the season. But the delay lasted longer for more upsetting reasons. There was a problem with the series 4 premier that set everyone and everything back for several months.

Me and two other interns were in the editing room along with the lead animators and sound editors for the final cut. We received the copy that was supposed to be "Fear of a Krabby Patty" and gathered around the screen to watch. Now, given that it isn't final yet animators often put up a mock title card, sort of an inside joke for us, with phony, often times lewd titles, such as "How sex doesn't work" instead of "Rock-a-by-Bivalve" when spongebob and patrick adopt a sea scallop. Nothing particularly funny but work related chuckles. So when we saw the title card "Squidward's Suicide" we didn't think it more than a morbid joke. One of the interns did a small throat laugh at it. The happy-go-lucky music plays as is normal.

The story began with Squidard practicing his clarinet, hitting a few sour notes like normal. We hear Spongebob laughing outside and Squidard stops, yelling at him to keep it down as he has a concert that night and needs to practice. Spongebob says okay and goes to see Sandy with with Patrick. The bubbles splash screen comes up and we see the ending of Squidward's concert. This is when things began to seem off. While playing, a few frames repeat themselves, but the sound doesn't (at this point sound is synced up with animation so yes that's not common) but when he stops playing, the sound finishes as if the skip never happened. There is slight mummuring in the crowed before they begin to boo him. Not normal cartoon booing that is common in the show, but you could very clearly hear malace in it. Squidward's in full frame and looks visibly afraid. The shot goes to the crowd, with Spongebob in center frame, and he too is booing, very much unlike him. That isn't the oddest thing, though. What is odd is everyone had hyper realistic eyes. Very detailed. Clearly not shots of real people's eyes, but something a bit more real than CGI. The pupils were red. Some of us looked at eachother, obviously confused, but since we weren't the writers we didn't question its appeal to children, yet.

The shot goes to Squidward sitting on the edge of his bed, looking very forlorn. The view out of his porthole window is of a night sky so it isn't very long after the concert. The unsettling part is at this point there is no sound. Literally no sound. Not even the feedback from the speakers in the room. It's as if the speakers were turned off, though their status showed them working perfectly. He just sat there, blinking, in this silence for about 30 seconds, then he started to sob softly. He put his hands (tentacles) over his eyes and cried quietly for a full minute more, all the while a sound in the background very slowly growing from nothing to barely audible. It sounded like a slight breeze through a forest.

The screen slowly begins to zoom in on his face. By slow I mean it's only noticeable if you look at shots 10 seconds apart side by side. His sobbing gets louder, more full of hurt and anger. The screen then twitches a bit, as if it twists in on itself, for a split second then back to normal. The wind-through-the-trees sound gets slowly louder and more severe, as if a storm is brewing somewhere. The eerie part is this sound, and Squidward's sobbing, sounded real, as if the sound wasn't coming from the speakers but as if the speakers were holes the sound was coming through from the other side. As good as sound as the studio likes to have, they don't purchase the equipment to be that good to produce sound of that quality.

Below the sound of the wind and sobbing, very faint, something sounded like laughing. It came at odd intervals and never lasted more than a second so you had a hard time pinning it (we watched this show twice, so pardon me if things sound too specific but I've had time to think about them). After 30 seconds of this, the screen blurred and twitched violently and something flashed over the screen, as if a single frame was replaced. The lead animation editor paused and rewound frame by frame. What we saw was horrible. It was a still photo of a dead child. He couldn't have been more than 6. The face was mangled and bloodied, one eye dangling over his upturned face, popped. He was naked down to his underwear, his stomach crudely cut open and his entrails laying beside him. He was laying on some pavement that was probably a road. The most upsetting part was that there was a shadow of the photographer. There was no crime tape, no evidence tags or markers, and the angle was completely off for a shot designed to be evidence. It would seem the photographer was the person responsible for the child's death.

We were of course mortified, but pressed on, hoping that it was just a sick joke. The screen flipped back to Squidward, still sobbing, louder than before, and half body in frame. There was now what appeard to be blood running down his face from his eyes. The blood was also done in a hyper realistic style, looking as if you touched it you'd get blood on your fingers. The wind sounded now as if it were that of a gale blowing through the forest; there were even snapping sounds of branches. The laughing, a deep baritone, lasting at longer intervals and coming more frequently. After about 20 seconds, the screen again twisted and showed a single frame photo. The editor was reluctant to go back, we all were, but he knew he had to. This time the photo was that of what appeared to be a little girl, no older than the first child. She was laying on her stomach, her barrettes in a pool of blood next to her. Her left eye was too popped out and popped, naked except for underpants. Her entrails were piled on top of her above another crude cut along her back. Again the body was on the street and the photographer's shadow was visible, very similar in size and shape to the first. I had to choke back vomit and one intern, the only female in the room, ran out.

The show resumed. About 5 seconds after this second photo played, Squidward went silent, as did all sound, like it was when this scene started. He put his tentacles down and his eyes were now done in hyper realism like the others were in the beginning of this episode. They were bleeding, bloodshot, and pulsating. He just stared at the screen, as if watching the viewer. After about 10 seconds, he started sobbing, this time not covering his eyes. The sound was piercing and loud, and most fear inducing of all is his sobbing was mixed with screams. Tears and blood were dripping down his face at a heavy rate. The wind sound came back, and so did the deep voiced laughing, and this time the still photo lasted for a good 5 frames. The animator was able to stop it on the 4th and backed up. This time the photo was of a boy, about the same age, but this time the scene was different. The entrails were just being pulled out from a stomach wound by a large hand, the right eye popped and dangling, blood trickling down it. The animator proceeded. It was hard to believe, but the next one was different but we couldn't tell what. He went on to the next, same thing. He want back to the first and played them quicker and I lost it. I vomited on the floor, the animating and sound editors gasping at the screen. The 5 frames were not as if they were 5 different photos, they were played out as if they were frames from a video. We saw the hand slowly lift out the guts, we saw the kid's eyes focus on it, we even saw two frames of the kid beginning to blink. The lead sound editor told us to stop, he had to call in the creator to see this. Mr. Hillenburg arrived within about 15 minutes. He was confused as to why he was called down there, so the editor just continued the episode.

Once the few frames were shown, all screaming, all sound again stopped. Squidward was just staring at the viewer, full frame of the face, for about 3 seconds. The shot quickly panned out and that deep voice said "DO IT" and we see in Squidward's hands a shotgun. He immediately puts the gun in his mouth and pulls the trigger. Realistic blood and brain matter splatters the wall behind him, and his bed, and he flies back with the force. The last 5 seconds of this episode show his body on the bod, on his side, one eye dangling on what's left of his head above the floor, staring blankly at it. Then the episode ends.

Mr Hillenburg is obviously angry at this. He demanded to know wht the hell was going on. Most people left the room at this point, so it was just a handful of us to watch it again. Viewing the episode twice only served to imprint the entirety of it in my mind and cause me horrible nightmares. I'm sorry I stayed.

The only theory we could think of was the file was edited by someone in the chain from the drawing studio to here. The CTO was called in to analyze when it happened. The analysis of the file did show it was edited over by new material. However, the timestamp of it was a mere 24 seconds before we began viewing it. All equipment involved was examined for foreign software and hardware as well as glitches, as if the time stamp may have glitched and showed the wrong time, but everything checked out fine. We don't know what happened and to this day nobody does. There was an investigation due to the nature of the photos, but nothing came of it. No child seen was identified and no clues were gathered from the data involved nor physical clues in the photos. I never believed in unexplainable phenomena before, but now that I have something happen and can't prove anything about it beyond anecdotal evidence, I think twice about things.
That was a bloody good read.
 

Shoqiyqa

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Mr.Mattress said:
Mcupobob said:
Been snoping around form more scares found a awesome youtube channel.


enjoy and shit a brick.
Damn that's scary. I wonder if that's true or not... Probably not though...
I want to know what the midnight-blue jelly anemone thing is and how they made it wiggle like that.
 

DanDeFool

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topbloke said:
SHIT... that middle photo is taken in a suburb of Perth, Australia. The city i live in... im scared now
MercurySteam said:
See if you can spot The Slender Man in these photos:

No need to worry. Slender Man is a COMPLETE fabrication; a myth born on the SomethingAwful forums.

I'm more paranoid of the Caving Story and Dionaea House stories. If they're not real, they're remarkably well put-together horror pieces.

I'm even more paranoid about that tunnel I mentioned. Wonder if I'll ever ask my friends to take me there so I can see it for myself.
 

Shoqiyqa

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Dexiro said:
dragon_of_red said:
<url=http://www.angelfire.com/trek/caver/page1.html>Teds Caving Story is about a person who finds an unexplored cave, and tried to explore it. Really interesting, Written in his perspective from a 'Caving Diary'. Its really good.
I've read that one before, it's bloody brilliant ;D

It's assured me that i'll never go caving, ever!
The alternative lessons to take away would be to trust the dog's instincts and not to vandalise caves.

Children believe in monsters. Adults often don't. This means that when confronted with a monster a child knows it's a monster but an adult refuses to see it. Sometimes it pays to listen to the instincts of the one who hasn't been taught to suppress them.
 

Tekkawarrior

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Shoqiyqa said:
Mr.Mattress said:
Mcupobob said:
Been snoping around form more scares found a awesome youtube channel.


enjoy and shit a brick.
Damn that's scary. I wonder if that's true or not... Probably not though...
I want to know what the midnight-blue jelly anemone thing is and how they made it wiggle like that.
Ferrofluid is the name, and it wiggles from magnetic intervention.
 

AbsoluteVirtue18

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I read this on the Poke'mon Nightmare Fuel page on TVTropes, and then someone reposted it on the Escapist:

In the original Pokémon Red/Blue, when you encounter your rival in Lavender Town he asks whether or not you know what it's like to have one of your Pokémon die. At this point in the game, he no longer has his Raticate that he used in previous battles.Your rival battle before this took place aboard the S.S. Anne. Your rival's Raticate sustained serious injuries from the battle...but, because crowding and confusion on the luxury liner, he was unable to make it to a Pokémon Center in time and the Raticate passed away. The real reason your rival is in Lavender Town to begin with is to lay his deceased friend to rest.Despite all of this, your rival never outwardly tells you that you're responsible for the death of his Pokémon. He hides his grief and instead channels that energy into the motivation he needed to continue his quest to become Indigo League Champion. The death of his Raticate effectively destroys your rival's impish, childhood innocence. Although he tells himself that he doesn't hold you responsible, he subconsciously holds a great deal of resentment towards you which further fuels his ambitions.Tearfully swearing upon his Raticate's grave to not fail in what he set out to do, he trains hard in hopes of becoming better than you...defeating you...and to eventually make it to the Pokémon League. Mere moments after he became Indigo League champion, he was defeated...by you. Although he fulfilled his promise to his fallen Pokémon, it was only for a painfully brief instant.In the end, your rival is scolded by his grandfather while you receive the professor's praise. During the course of the game, you steal your rival's innocence, crush his dreams, and ultimately snatch away the love of his own grandfather. Oh, and by the way, your rival doesn't have any parents. He's an orphan.

Ah, I managed to find the picture I originally saw it on!

 

Video Gone

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Mcupobob said:
Haven't seen one of these in awhile, for those of you who don't wish to sleep and want a constant chill down your spine then you've found the right thread.

Post up scary stories/pics/ or videos or make one.

I'll start off us off by horrifing you with the slender man

Remind anyone else of a certain point 'n click character?
Yeah, I loved the Chzo Mythos.
Anyway, what's the origin of that slender man thing?

OT: The classic.
Tell me if it's been used in the thread already and I'll put something else.
EDIT: True to my word, I shall edit in another video as someone somehow had that exact thing as a coffee commercial for whatever reason, which I won't comment on.
Ladies and gentlemen, prepare yourselves for a visage TRULY TERRIFYING!
See, that invokes true fear.
 

Reynard Wrecce

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May 15, 2010
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Wish I'd never heard this sound...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgF9ZlI_R-8

Gets spookier the more you learn about it.
 

darkfire613

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Okay. The smile.dog posted by Pararaptor on the first page. That is what really stuck with me from this topic. Here's what it did to me:
I was working in my grandparents' used bookstore. My grandma had gone grocery shopping, my grandpa had gone to the post office and thrift stores, and theree was no one in the store. Bored, I open the Escspist and see this topic in the recent posts box on the front page. I open it.

Because the Internet at the bookstore is practically dialup speed, I can't watch the Slender Man video. I scroll down and see smile.dog.

Normally, I have an incredibly strong resistance to creepy or horrifying stuff. I will be scared by a story or something, but I will always get over it within ten minutes. Also, there is almost no picture that can shock me on the Internet. However, as soon as I looked at smile.dog, I felt shivers go down my spine, and even tears well up in my eyes. The picture frightened me in some primal way, completely terrifying me to the very core. There was something about the mouth grinning, and the eye felt like it could actually see me. I quickly scroll away

I read a few more stories but begin to think: for something to scare me so deeply, there needs to be a story behind it, something. I scroll back up, and stare at the picture again, probably for 30 seconds. Once again, I get the chills radiating up and down my body, and I can feel an overwhelming need to cry from the sheer terror it irrationally struck into me.

I follow the image through to ED, finding that it is called smile.dog. I had never heard of it before this point. I google about it, and find the stories that usually accompany the image. Psychosis, lucid nightmares in which the dog tells the person to "pass it on." At this point, I also find the other version, the one that is more obviously just a husky with a Photoshop job. That one is almost reassuring to me in its goofiness, after what I had felt about the one posted here. I save a copy of both to my computer.

I then find the story about "Mary," one of the supposed victims of smile.dog. I have a very rational mind. I don't fall for urban legends, and I go by logic in almost everything I do. I know the supposed curse is just a load of bullshit, but i have no doubt that the image can cause nightmares.

What I found most interesting are the other reports. Other people claimed to have had similar, if not identical reactions to the picture. I had not read any of these stories before seeing the picture myself, and I still had the same reaction as others. There is just something about the pictures, something that casts some people into fight or flight, something that brings up primal fear in them.

For the rest of the daym i would randomly think of the picture. Long after some of the other stories here had left my mind, the smile.dog was still popping up. Each time I would even think about it, i would get the same chills, the same shiver and adrenaline rush as the first time.

Last night, I almost couldn't sleep. The picture was still in my head, but lying in the dark in my room, away from the distractions of life, it was first and foremost in my head. Every time I closed my eyes, I would see it, standing there, staring at me with that same huge, demonic grin.

I never remember my dreams, well, not never, but very rarely. Extremely rarely. I hoped that, if I did have a nightmare, which I was legitimately worried about, that I wouldn't remember it. I eventually got to sleep around 4 to 4:30 am. This morning, smile.dog is still popping into my head, but I don't remember any dreams. My fears from while I was awake did not carry over into the unconscious sleep. There's always tonight though?
 

Shoqiyqa

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killer-corkonian said:
OT: The classic.
Tell me if it's been used in the thread already and I'll put something else.
The exact same sample frame appears on the insertion of a "Coffee commercial" earlier.

One to go with the shaking bed:

The house is at least 200 years old. It's been extended over the decades, but the main part is a farmhouse with a 200-year-old fireplace. Those walls have been there a long time. The bookshelves have been there a long time. They're oak, black with age even where they've lost chunks from their edges to carelessness. They probably stopped settling into place before anyone reading this now was born.

Two and a half hours ago, everyone else left, leaving just one person reading Stephen King's IT on the windowsill in the corner of the room nearest the kitchen. In those two and a half hours, this person has moved only to turn the page or go through to the kitchen for a drink, and the last drink was half an hour ago.

The Sun's just going down.

In the far corner of the room, six of those six-inch-high and two-inch-thick books all fall over at once on that solid old bookshelf.

...

and my ancient mobile phone just started working and got a signal again.
 

Tekkawarrior

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Shoqiyqa said:
*snip*

The exact same sample frame appears on the insertion of a "Coffee commercial" earlier.

One to go with the shaking bed:

The house is at least 200 years old. It's been extended over the decades, but the main part is a farmhouse with a 200-year-old fireplace. Those walls have been there a long time. The bookshelves have been there a long time. They're oak, black with age even where they've lost chunks from their edges to carelessness. They probably stopped settling into place before anyone reading this now was born.

Two and a half hours ago, everyone else left, leaving just one person reading Stephen King's IT on the windowsill in the corner of the room nearest the kitchen. In those two and a half hours, this person has moved only to turn the page or go through to the kitchen for a drink, and the last drink was half an hour ago.

The Sun's just going down.

In the far corner of the room, six of those six-inch-high and two-inch-thick books all fall over at once on that solid old bookshelf.

...

and my ancient mobile phone just started working and got a signal again.
I don't understand at all.
 

Mr.Mattress

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Tekkawarrior said:
Shoqiyqa said:
*snip*

The exact same sample frame appears on the insertion of a "Coffee commercial" earlier.

One to go with the shaking bed:

The house is at least 200 years old. It's been extended over the decades, but the main part is a farmhouse with a 200-year-old fireplace. Those walls have been there a long time. The bookshelves have been there a long time. They're oak, black with age even where they've lost chunks from their edges to carelessness. They probably stopped settling into place before anyone reading this now was born.

Two and a half hours ago, everyone else left, leaving just one person reading Stephen King's IT on the windowsill in the corner of the room nearest the kitchen. In those two and a half hours, this person has moved only to turn the page or go through to the kitchen for a drink, and the last drink was half an hour ago.

The Sun's just going down.

In the far corner of the room, six of those six-inch-high and two-inch-thick books all fall over at once on that solid old bookshelf.

...

and my ancient mobile phone just started working and got a signal again.
I don't understand at all.
Neither do I... Your gonna have to explain it to us.
 

Shoqiyqa

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That was three separate things.

1) a note that the video posted above looked like a repost.

2) a brief little story about books falling over when they had no right to do so

3) an unrelated note about a bizarre incident.
 

Tekkawarrior

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Shoqiyqa said:
2) a brief little story about books falling over when they had no right to do so
This is the one that doesn't make sense, why wouldn't they fall over? also who went to the kitchen? and who was reading the IT book?
 

Mcupobob

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Threads going a little slow so I got another video for those of you not terrifed yet.