monster
Monsters and horror go hand in hand; explore horrific creatures, beasts and hairy scaries like Freddy Krueger, Frankenstein and far beyond.
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 Archive9 days 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 Archive11 days ago in Horror
Shelter
It was a Tuesday night in January and the dogs were uneasy. Blue, the only certified hound dog in the ragtag little pack, stood under the kitchen table with his ears back and his tail curled under him. Carlos, the lab, was trying to hide himself behind Roger’s legs and whining like his paw was caught in a snare. Even Chili, normally a loud and fearless little S.O.B., was somewhere in the guest bedroom: his position revealed only by the jingling as he scratched at his collar. Roger didn’t blame them. The wind that night could have put anyone on edge.
By Daniel Bradbury12 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 Archive13 days ago in Horror
The Tithe and the Toll
Miller pulled out a chair—a spindly, mismatched thing I’d salvaged from a dumpster and sat across from me with the grace of a king inhabiting a ruined throne. He leaned into my personal space, and for the first time in the flickering, jaundiced light of the basement, I saw the Tithe he wore. It wasn't a police badge or a municipal seal. It was a small, lapel pin made of blackened gold, shaped like a shattered vinyl record, jagged edges catching light like teeth.
By Nathan McAllister13 days ago in Horror
An elderly man stabs 3 women in broad daylight in Egypt
Yesterday, on El-Fareed Street in the Ezbet El-Nakhl area, life was proceeding as usual in a calm Ramadan atmosphere; passersby were rushing to buy their needs before the Maghrib call to prayer, vendors were calling out their goods, and the sounds of children blended with the aroma of food filling the place. But those peaceful moments suddenly turned into a scene of horror and shock.
By Hossam Gamal13 days ago in Horror
A Smart Home Glitch in 2026 That Will Make You Unplug Everything
Have you ever sat in a quiet room and thought to yourself, is my Alexa watching me? We invite these devices into our private spaces, assuming we are the masters and they are the servants. But in 2026, the technology has crossed a threshold. What happens when your smart home doesn’t just learn your routines, but learns how to perfectly mimic your voice? This isn’t just another smart home glitch. This is what happens when the house decides it no longer needs you.
By The Glitch Archive14 days ago in Horror
The Lungs of the Leviathan
The ventilation shaft of the Aegis Building was a masterclass in sterile, high-pressure engineering. To the world outside, it was a marvel of the "New Century" architecture—a structure that breathed with the rhythmic precision of an athlete. I should know. I had spent three years of my life obsessing over the fluid dynamics of these very ducts. I had patented the "Thorne-Baffles," the series of angled, galvanized steel plates designed to catch the whistle of the wind at eighty stories up and silence it before it could disturb a single CEO’s phone call.
By Nathan McAllister14 days ago in Horror










