psychological
Mind games taken way too far; explore the disturbing genre of psychological thrillers that make us question our perception of sanity and reality.
The Man Who Couldn't Die
David Bennett was fifty-seven years old when he became the first person to receive a genetically modified pig heart transplant in January 2022, a medical milestone that made international headlines and was celebrated as a breakthrough in xenotransplantation that could solve the organ shortage crisis and save thousands of lives, but what the triumphant press releases did not mention was that David had not initially wanted the experimental procedure and had only consented after being told he was ineligible for a human heart transplant and would die within weeks without intervention, and what happened during the two months he survived with the pig heart inside his chest before finally dying raises profound ethical questions about medical experimentation on desperate patients who have no other options and about whether extending biological life at any cost represents genuine medical success or a form of torture that serves researchers' ambitions more than patients' wellbeing.
By The Curious Writerabout 2 hours ago in Horror
The House That Kills
The House That Kills The Victorian mansion at 1247 Blackwood Avenue has stood empty for twenty years now, and local real estate agents refuse to list it regardless of price because the property has a documented history that no one can explain rationally and no one wants to continue, and the pattern is so statistically improbable that even skeptics admit something strange is happening even if they refuse to attribute it to supernatural causes. Between 1975 and 2002, the house went through nine different owners, and every single one of them died within three years of taking possession, and while the deaths were all attributed to various natural causes including heart attacks, strokes, sudden aggressive cancers, and one case of a previously healthy forty-year-old woman who developed a mysterious neurological condition that killed her in eighteen months, the statistical improbability of this pattern has never been adequately explained by medical professionals or statisticians who have examined the cases, and the house remains abandoned, slowly deteriorating while neighbors refuse to discuss it with outsiders and property values on the entire block have been suppressed by its reputation.
By The Curious Writerabout 2 hours ago in Horror
The Deleted Category: Why the 2026 Oscars Stopped for Fourteen Minutes
The 98th Academy Awards will be remembered for two things: the record-breaking sweep by the latest indie darling, and the fourteen minutes of dead air that never appeared in the official transcripts.
By The Glitch Archiveabout 9 hours ago in Horror
The Channel 3 Broadcast Archive: Why I Stopped Buying Unmarked VHS Tapes
There is a specific smell to forgotten media. It’s a mixture of degrading plastic, basement mildew, and the metallic tang of static electricity. If you frequent estate sales in the rural Midwest, you know exactly the scent I’m talking about. Most people go looking for antique furniture or vintage jewelry. I go looking for magnetic tape.
By The Glitch Archiveabout 18 hours ago in Horror
In June
June 3 I find myself still strangely lightheaded from my purchase this afternoon. My intent upon entering the antique shop had been merely to escape the sweltering heat, yet I soon found myself in the back of the place, standing before a statue, my breath heavy and rhythmic, my hand rubbing at my wallet. I cannot recall crossing through the store.
By Aaron Morrisonabout 19 hours ago in Horror




