Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Horror.
All 9 people died, their tongues and eyeballs were gouged out. What secrets are hidden deep inside the snow capped mountains?
The event we are going to talk about today is more chilling than any supernatural legend - because it is a real unsolved case that happened more than 60 years ago, and despite official conclusions, it has never been able to quell all doubts. It is the Diatlov incident in the Ural Mountains of the former Soviet Union. In the frozen snow capped mountain at minus 40 degrees Celsius, 9 experienced climbers died mysteriously. The tent was cut open from the inside, and the body wounds were eerie. There were radioactive residues in the clothing, and strange fireballs in the sky... Is all of this a natural force or an unknown fear?
By Aiden Wangabout an hour ago in Horror
Midnight Knocking on Doors, Portraits Crying: The Hundred Year Paranormal Curse Covering Stalin, No One dares to Break It Until Today
When it comes to Stalin, people often think of his iron fisted rule, the rise of the Soviet Union, and that heavy history, but few people know that there are many chilling supernatural rumors circulating around this Soviet supreme leader. These stories shuttle through the cracks of history, difficult to distinguish between truth and falsehood, but they become more and more mysterious. Today, I will slowly tell you about them.
By Aiden Wangabout 2 hours ago in Horror
The People of the Cave
Thousands of years ago, there lived a king in Rome named Decius (known in Arabic as Daqyanus). He was a cruel ruler who did not believe in Allah and worshipped idols instead. He forced his people to bow before these idols and punished anyone who opposed them. However, among this idol-worshipping nation, there were a few wise and thoughtful young men who believed that these idols made of stone and clay could not be gods.
By Sudais Zakwanabout 6 hours ago in Horror
Revenge of the Soul
The incident dates back to 1904. A man once said to me that near the shrine of Hazrat Khwaja Nizamuddin Auliya (Delhi), there was no well, and the water of the baoli was brackish. He offered to build a well near the eastern gate of the shrine if I permitted it. I agreed, saying that sweet water was badly needed and perhaps a well would provide it.
By Sudais Zakwanabout 6 hours ago in Horror
The Rabbit Girl and the Swamp Princess
Once upon a time, a young girl lived near the edge of the woods with her family raising rabbits. The forest was dark and evil, her father told her, and she was forbidden from wandering there. “Only wicked things live in the woods,” he would say. “Witches, monsters, and freaks make their home there. Beware!” But the only things she would see there were squirrels, birds, and the occasional hawk which she’d have to keep an eye on, for it liked rabbits. For her, the forest was peaceful and full of surprises, the perfect place to daydream, which she would do often.
By The Late Heavyabout 17 hours ago in Horror
The Mirror
The mirror had been there since before Ashley could remember. It stood in the hallway outside her bedroom — tall, dark-framed, slightly taller than it should have been for the wall it occupied. She had never questioned it. That was the thing about the mirror. It simply was, the way the floorboards were, the way the morning light fell crooked through the kitchen window. Unremarkable. Permanent.
By Parsley Rose about 19 hours ago in Horror
The Silent Room (Chapter One: The House That Breathes)
No one noticed the house at the end of Blackwood Lane until it decided to be noticed. For years, it stood there in perfect stillness, its windows dark, its gates rusted shut. People passed it every day and forgot it the moment it slipped out of sight. That was the rule of the house: if it did not want to be remembered, it wasn’t.
By Mohamed Hamdya day ago in Horror











