What is creepypasta pokemon




















Oh, and here's a sad AMV for you. Seriously, Lonliness is adorable and needs to be taken home and given treats and warm blankets and cuddles. Centering around a hack of Silver duh , the story contains a fascinating, melancholy message: that a person's deeds are remembered more than the person.

That, more than the creepy stuff that happens, is the draw for me — sometimes, psychological horror is the most effective type of horror. And the best thing about it? Like Creepy Black and Abandon Lonliness, there is nothing supernatural about the game — it's just a hack, and as such, really could exist.

In fact, someone created a playable version of it, with input from the author, including an extra path that adds to the story. I'll admit that playing it creeped me out, and freaked the hell out of my sister, so there's that. If you want to see it in action, you can watch TheJWittz or Reidd Maxwell play it; or you can read the original story, linked above.

Here's a story perfect for Halloween! Not to be confused with the awesome indie game of the same name, 'Braid' is a tale about Ilex Forest, told through three different narratives that are flawlessly woven together Heh.

Like a braid. The creepiness is amped up through the use of the second-person perspective, and it really is something to behold. I'm definitely not going to spoil it for you — it's another long one, but the payoff is beautiful — but suffice it to say, if Phantump existed in Gen II or IV, you know they'd show up in Ilex Forest.

This is probably also the best-written story on this list, so seriously, go and read it. Go on, I'll wait. You may have noticed a certain trend with this list — stories that have a melancholy edge to them, and stories that have no supernatural element to them; stories that could just be real. Now, this story is creepy, but the horror doesn't show up until very late into it — and yet, the hack is so engrossing and so normal that it's a shock when things go horribly wrong.

The hack is also meant to be a prequel to Red and Blue, and you know what? It actually works in context of the canon! Return to that spot again in the future and their sprite would be replaced with a gravestone. Much later, once you defeat the Elite Four, the game changes.

The author describes the shift. An old man was standing, looking at tombstones. You then realized this man was your character. The man moved at only half of your normal walking speed. The only signifier that they might've once existed is their tombstones, left on the ground where you cursed them. Eventually, you can head back to your home, in Pallet Town. If you walk back to your house and step onto the tile you began the game on, the screen fades to black.

Then trainers appear, Young Boys and Fishermen and Super Nerds materializing on screen for a moment before flashing past. As an old man you're limited to one move — struggle — which chips away at your health until it's down to almost nothing. The screen fades to black again. On rebooting the Game Boy, your save game is gone.

Most creepypasta — the Russian Sleep Experiment , Anansi's Goatman — are campfire stories that happened to find their home online. But there's a growing subset of stories embedded in video games, scares made more scary by their familiar virtual context.

Most of these stories draw their power from a sense of rarity. Another example: jvkz. Mostly, though, many bootlegs are old, and nobody has much of an idea of where they come from. Briggs speculates that many might have a similar origin. Graphics and music ripped from Telefang have been found in several other unrelated bootleg games, for example.

Your starter looks like Sandslash?? Sometimes these bootlegs genuinely sound like creepypasta—or at least, that would be the hype surrounding them. One fan I spoke to this year said he once played a game that seemingly froze within a dark cave, with no way to escape or make progress.

The A. By Patricia Hernandez.



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