slasher
Don't open that door! Psycho made slasher films a hallmark of the horror genre; explore iconic hackers, slashers, and chainsaw-wielding psychopaths, from the safety of your living room.
I Photographed a Cursed Wedding: The Uninvited Guest in the Background
I’ve been a professional wedding photographer for six years. I’ve seen Bridezillas, drunk uncles, and disastrous weather, but I’ve never experienced a true wedding horror story until the Sterling-Vance ceremony last October.
By The Glitch Archivea day ago in Horror
The Shadow Diagnosis
In 2026, we stopped talking to humans about our problems. It was too expensive, too slow, and frankly, too judgmental. We turned to "Aura-Psych." For $9.99 a month, the app uses your front-facing camera to analyze your micro-expressions and heart rate, providing "real-time spiritual and mental alignment." But when Maya’s app updated to the "Deep-Scan" version, it didn't just find anxiety. It found a second heartbeat.
By The Glitch Archive4 days ago in Horror
The Story Draft: "The Room Between the Walls"
We think we know our homes. We know every creak in the floorboards, every stain on the carpet, and the exact distance from the bed to the light switch. But have you ever measured the outside of your house and compared it to the inside? In 2026, the "Home-Scan" app made real estate easy. But for Elias, it didn't just map his living room. It found a void. A fifteen-square-foot space in the heart of his home that had no door, no windows, and—according to the floor plan—didn't exist.
By The Glitch Archive5 days ago in Horror
The Neighborhood Association Sent a Fine for My Husband’s Heart Attack
The letter arrived in a cream-colored envelope, embossed with the gold leaf seal of the Maple Crest Homeowners Association. It was tucked neatly into our mailbox, precisely three inches from the right-hand edge, exactly as the bylaws mandated.
By The Glitch Archive7 days ago in Horror
The Overtoun Bridge Dog Suicides
The Overtoun Bridge near Milton, Scotland, is a beautiful Victorian structure built in 1895 that arches gracefully over the Overtoun Burn fifty feet below, offering scenic views of the Scottish countryside, and it should be an unremarkable example of nineteenth-century engineering except for the deeply disturbing fact that since the 1950s over six hundred dogs have jumped from the bridge to their deaths or serious injury, and the dogs almost always jump from the same side of the bridge, almost always at the same spot between the final two parapets, and many of the dogs that survive the fall and are rescued have attempted to jump again, returning to the bridge and leaping a second time as though compelled by some force their owners cannot understand or control, creating one of the most bizarre and unsettling mysteries in the modern world. The phenomenon has been documented for decades, with local residents and visitors reporting seeing dogs suddenly break away from their owners, jump up onto the parapet wall, and leap over the edge without any apparent provocation or warning, and the consistency of the behavior across hundreds of different dogs of various breeds and temperaments suggests something about the specific location triggers this suicidal behavior rather than individual psychological issues with particular animals, though what that triggering factor might be has never been definitively determined despite extensive investigation by animal behaviorists, scientists, and even paranormal researchers.
By The Curious Writer8 days ago in Horror






