Creepypasta - Omnibus One
ONE HUNDED AND FIFTY COLLECTED STORIES: Terrifying Tales Featuring Slenderman, Jeff the Killer, Eyeless Jack, BEN Drowned, Laughing Jack, The Rake, Zalgo, and Others
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
Compra ahora por $6.99
-
Narrado por:
-
Virtual Voice
-
De:
-
Mark Watson
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Creepypasta - Omnibus One gathers all 150 terrifying stories from Creepypasta: Volume One, Volume Two, and Volume Three into a single, definitive omnibus, a dark archive of internet horror born in inboxes, comment threads, sleepless nights, and flickering screens.
Pulled from the viral Fiction by Mark Watson Substack, these stories aren’t polished campfire tales. They’re warnings. Whispers passed along too quickly. Fragments of nightmares that feel uncomfortably familiar. Together, they chart the evolution of modern horror as it spread through forums, emails, corrupted files, and half-remembered legends we all swore were fake.
Within these pages, iconic figures like Slenderman, Jeff the Killer, BEN Drowned, Eyeless Jack, The Rake, Laughing Jack, and Zalgo don’t just appear... they change. They watch. They follow. And they refuse to stay contained within the stories meant to hold them. Each tale blurs the boundary between fiction and memory, asking a simple, unsettling question: What if you didn’t imagine this?
If Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark warped your childhood, if Goosebumps opened the door, and if The Twilight Zone taught you to distrust reality, this collection is the natural—and dangerous—next step. Where Black Mirror exposes the dystopia of tomorrow, Creepypasta - Omnibus One reveals the horror that’s already been living in your browser history.
These 150 stories grew in the shadows of the internet, shaped by fans, night-thought scribes, and people who stared too long into glowing screens. Raw, personal, and deeply unsettling, this omnibus is more than an anthology—it’s a reckoning with the ghosts of the digital age.
Read it if you dare. Just don’t read it alone.
GRAB YOUR COPY NOW