13 comments

  • pxndxx 18 hours ago ago

    Inscryption captured the "videogame creepypasta" genre in an actual, pretty good roguelike video game, if you want more of this!

    • joshu 7 hours ago ago

      Inscryption is a towering achievement, especially the frame story. Definitely an example of game as Art

  • neuroelectron 16 hours ago ago

    Pretty creepy. Here's a direct link to the scenes in question:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGOJmdxdjeA&t=230s

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6D2XCJUJHY&t=65s

    The effects are made with N64 ROM hacking in Project64 emulator and video editing.

  • randomtoast 16 hours ago ago

    Short Summary:

    Ben Drowned is a viral internet horror story (a “creepypasta”) created in 2010 by Alex Hall, who posted under the pseudonym “Jadusable.” The tale revolves around a supposedly haunted Nintendo 64 cartridge of The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask. The cartridge was unlabeled, and when played, exhibited disturbing behavior: reversed music, distorted graphics, and the recurring presence of a statue of Link with a petrified, menacing expression. The in-game ghost was said to be “Ben,” the spirit of a boy who drowned.

    Related Wiki Article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Drowned

  • 2OEH8eoCRo0 14 hours ago ago

    Are haunted/cursed games a common fear in children? I recall a recurring nightmare where my Sim Town game was corrupted or cursed. Having all of the game rules become inverted was terrifying for some reason.

    • MisterTea 12 hours ago ago

      As a child I only once remember fearing a machine - the local dry cleaning machine. That thing was a tubular tentacle monster to a child. I feared people a lot more and felt that machines were predictable as they were not biological therefor could not be possessed or haunted. I also have no fears of supernatural beings nor do I have religious inclination to fear a gods/demons/spirits/etc. People are the real monsters.

    • gs17 13 hours ago ago

      I've always had nightmares about technology misbehaving, but I blame it on my childhood Mac being one that would sometimes start up with with the screen inverted, the "happy Mac" icon replaced with a dead sad Mac, and the sound of a car crash. The machine that usually follows specific rules randomly deciding to scare you definitely builds some anxiety.

    • yazantapuz 11 hours ago ago

      Not a game, but where i live, stories of haunted smurfs toys (or clothes!) that killed their owners where pretty popular, and definitily scaried me when i was a child (we had a tiny smurf action figure and a sega genesis cartdrige of the smurfs game)

    • dafelst 14 hours ago ago

      For what it's worth, I experienced the same sort of nightmares, though it typically wasn't a specific game or program, more like the computer being hacked/compromised/haunted.

    • nekoashide 13 hours ago ago

      Ghostbusters on the NES was fear inducing as an 80's kid, then came Resident Evil on the PSX.

      • MisterTea 12 hours ago ago

        Fear inducing through the anxious environment created on purpose by the gameplay itself or the fear that the game would do something super-natural?

  • ThrowawayTestr 10 hours ago ago

    Do kids still have urban legends?

    • gs17 3 hours ago ago

      A lot of kids are obsessed with creepypasta-type media and indie horror games. It's not exactly "urban legends" but scary stories are still popular.