saguinsin14 Posted October 28, 2025 #226 Posted October 28, 2025 When i woke up in 2am and I see my grandmother and i scream and i thought it was something else Β Β saguinsin14 Szechuan1 1
ronron85 Posted October 28, 2025 #227 Posted October 28, 2025 Whoβs in my bed? A father went to say good night to his seven year old son, very well knowing that if he didnβt his son would have trouble sleeping. It was a nightly routine between them. He entered the dimly lit room where his son waited under his blanket. With the first glance the father could tell there was something unusual about his son tonight, but couldnβt put his finger on it. He looked the same but had a grin that drew from ear to ear. βYou okay, buddy?β the father asked. The son nodded, still with the grin, before saying, βDaddy, check for monsters under my bed.β The father chuckled a bit before getting on his knees to check only to satisfy his son. There, under the bed, pale and afraid, was his son. His real son. He whispered, βDaddy, there someone on my bedβ. Β ronron85πππ Szechuan1 1
DreamMarauder Posted October 28, 2025 #228 Posted October 28, 2025 Jack this lantern The pumpkin swallowed the rhythm. Miloβs chest went silent, yet he soared, ribcage now a lantern of violet auroras. He looped the neighborhood upside-down, trailing comet-dust giggles. Down on the porch, the jack-oβ-lantern pulsedβthump-thump, thump-thumpβlearning what it meant to be alive. It rolled off the step, grinning, and began to hunt for a second beat. MeHoff Β Name: DreamMarauderΒ Szechuan1 1
Wolfman247 Posted October 28, 2025 #229 Posted October 28, 2025 On Halloween night, Drake and Eddie set up their live stream in a creaky old mansion, excited to host a special stake.com gaming marathon for their fans. The sponsorship banners glowed eerily in the candlelit room as they joked with viewers and spun roulette on the haunted Stake.com app. Suddenly, the chat flooded with strange messages: βPlay the ghost game. Invite the house.β Drake shrugged and clicked on a game neither had seen before. As the reels spun, shadows in the mansion began to move. Their equipment flickered, and chilling whispers echoed through the halls. Each win sent icicles of dread through their veins until the grand jackpot triggered a blackout. Through the darkness, their screens flashed a message: βThe mansion has claimed your stake.β Frozen with fear, Drake and Eddie realized the ghosts were now their endless audience, ready for a show that would never end. Β stake ID : Wolfman247 Szechuan1 1
spitchaz Posted October 28, 2025 #230 Posted October 28, 2025 The demon in my house was scarier than Halloween.π When I was little, I had English class on Halloween.ππ¦ I was little, so I skipped English class and got my allowance to use for Halloween gifts, but I tried to keep it for myself.π€ When I got home, my mom found out I'd skipped English class. The angry look on her face at the time made it seem even scarier than Halloween. She looked like a real demon to me. I was the one in the wrong, after all. But now, I look back on it as a fond memory, knowing that it helped me raise a good child.π€£ Β stake id : spitchaz Szechuan1 1
rdo1337 Posted October 28, 2025 #231 Posted October 28, 2025 Mildred the witch tried to cast a spell on Halloween night, but her magic mirror just kept saying, βNo connection.β She groaned, waved her wand, and shouted, βRebootus Connectus!β The mirror blinked back to lifeβand immediately started showing cat videos. Even witches canβt escape bad Wi-Fi Β Stake: rdo1337Β Szechuan1 1
EbubeGod Posted October 28, 2025 #232 Posted October 28, 2025 The Whispering Jack-o'-LanternIn the sleepy town of Hollowbrook, where maple leaves swirled like forgotten secrets in the crisp October wind, Halloween was more than a holidayβit was a ritual. Every year, the old Victorian house on Elm Street stood sentinel at the edge of the woods, its windows glowing with an eerie orange light from the jack-o'-lanterns that lined its porch. No one knew who carved them, but they appeared like clockwork on October 30th, grinning toothlessly at passersby.Elara Thompson, a curious librarian in her mid-thirties, had always dismissed the local legends. "Superstitions," she'd scoff, adjusting her glasses as she shelved books on folklore. But this year, something felt off. The air hummed with an unnatural chill, and the pumpkins seemed... watchful. Their carved eyes followed her as she walked home from the library that evening, the full moon casting long shadows that danced like specters.On Halloween night, Elara decided to investigate. Armed with a flashlight and a thermos of hot cider, she approached the house. The porch creaked under her boots, and the jack-o'-lanterns flickered as if breathing. One in particular caught her eyeβa massive gourd with a lopsided smile, its stem twisted like a crown. As she leaned closer, a faint whisper escaped its hollow mouth."Come inside... we've been waiting."Elara froze. It was probably the wind, she told herself, or kids playing tricks. But the door swung open on its own, revealing a dimly lit foyer cluttered with antique furniture draped in cobwebs. Dust motes floated in the air like tiny ghosts. Against her better judgment, she stepped in.The house was alive with memories not her own. In the parlor, faded photographs on the walls showed a family from the 1800s: a stern father, a weary mother, and a young girl with wide, haunted eyes. Elara touched one frame, and a chill ran up her arm. Whispers echoed from the shadowsβnames, dates, fragments of conversations long silenced.Upstairs, in a nursery bathed in moonlight, she found a rocking chair swaying gently. Toys scattered on the floor began to move: a porcelain doll blinked, a wooden train chugged along invisible tracks. The whispers grew louder, forming words."She never left... join us... stay forever."Panic rising, Elara bolted for the stairs, but the steps twisted beneath her feet, leading her deeper into the house instead of out. She burst into a hidden attic, where the air was thick with the scent of rotting pumpkins. There, amid stacks of yellowed letters, sat the source of the whispers: a spectral figure of the young girl from the photos, her form translucent and flickering like candlelight.The ghost's eyes were sorrowful. "They carved me out," she murmured, her voice like rustling leaves. "Hollowed my soul on All Hallows' Eve. Now I carve themβthe lonely, the curiousβto fill the emptiness."Elara's heart pounded. She realized the jack-o'-lanterns outside weren't just decorations; they were vessels, trapping the essences of those who'd wandered too close. The girl's family had been the first, cursed by a witch's spiteful spell after a long-forgotten betrayal. Each Halloween, the house hungered for more.Desperate, Elara grabbed a nearby lantern and smashed it against the floor. A wail erupted as orange pulp splattered, and the whispers fractured into chaos. The ghost lunged, but Elara recited a half-remembered incantation from her folklore books: "By moon's light and harvest's end, release the bound, let spirits mend!"The house shuddered. Windows rattled, floors groaned. The ghost dissolved into mist, her final whisper a sigh of relief: "Free... at last."Elara stumbled out into the night, the door slamming shut behind her. The jack-o'-lanterns on the porch dimmed, their grins fading to blank stares. As dawn broke, the pumpkins withered, crumbling to dust.From that day on, the house on Elm Street stood dark and silent. No more glowing carvings appeared. But Elara never forgot the whispers. Every Halloween, she'd light a single candle in her windowβnot for the spirits, but as a reminder: some hollows are best left unfilled.And in Hollowbrook, when the wind howled through the trees, folks swore they could still hear faint laughter... or was it a warning? Β Szechuan1 1
shannusunny Posted October 28, 2025 #233 Posted October 28, 2025 π "The House That Waited" Β Every Halloween night, the old Thorne House on Willow Street seemed to breathe. Β It wasnβt just the creaking wood or the sighing wind that curled through its cracked shutters β no, the house truly waited. The townsfolk swore you could feel it watching as you passed, its empty windows glinting like eyes beneath the moonlight. Β Children dared each other to run up and touch the door. Few made it all the way. Fewer still would talk about what they heard when they did. Β This year, twelve-year-old Ivy decided sheβd be the first to stay until midnight. She didnβt believe in haunted houses, or ghosts, or stories meant to scare kids away from adventure. Armed with a flashlight and a backpack full of candy, she slipped through the iron gate as the town clock struck nine. Β Inside, the air was thick with dust and whispers. Portraits hung crooked on the walls β their painted eyes following her every step. The floorboards groaned underfoot like something deep beneath was stirring. Β At ten oβclock, the whispering began to take shape. At eleven, the front door slammed shut on its own. At eleven-thirty, Ivy found a single lit candle at the end of a hallway that hadnβt been there before. Β It flickered beside a dusty mirror. Β When she looked into it, she didnβt see herself β not exactly. Her reflection smiled before she did, then reached out a hand, pressing against the glass. βStay,β it whispered in her voice. βWeβve been waiting.β Β The candle went out. Β The next morning, the townspeople found the Thorne House quieter than ever. The windows no longer glinted in the sun. But if you looked closely, you might have noticed one new portrait on the wall β a little girl with a flashlight and a nervous smile β watching the next curious soul approach. Β And if you listen just right on Halloween night, when the wind curls through Willow Street, you can still hear a voice calling softly from inside: Β "Weβre still waiting." Β Stake username - shannusunny Szechuan1 1
that junky Posted October 28, 2025 #234 Posted October 28, 2025 The Whisper Inside the Walls I never believed in hauntings until I shifted to Pune in July last year. The flat was old but cheap, tucked inside a faded apartment building in Sadashiv Peth. The broker said the previous tenant had moved abroad in a hurry. The rooms smelled of dust and naphthalene, but the silence felt heavy, like it was holding its breath. For the first few nights, I heard faint tapping sounds from the walls, soft and rhythmic, like someone drumming fingers on the other side. I assumed it was rats. But the sound always came from the same corner near my bed. Once, around midnight, I tried tapping back, just once, playfully. The tapping stopped. Then, after a pause, it tapped back the exact same rhythm I had made. I didnβt sleep that night. Weeks passed. I stopped reacting. You get used to anything when you live alone. But one night, while half-asleep, I heard a whisper right beside my earβa womanβs voice saying my name. I froze. When I turned, there was no one. Just the faint smell of burnt camphor, something my mother used during evening prayers. The next morning, I found an old photograph tucked under my bed. It showed a woman sitting on the same balcony where I usually had my tea. Her smile looked faintly familiar. On the back, in faded ink, was written: βHe still hears me.β Days started merging. Sometimes the taps on the wall came even when I wasnβt home. Iβd return to find the window open, curtains wet, and faint wet footprints on the floor. I once told my neighbor about it, an elderly lady from the first floor. She looked uncomfortable and said, βBeta, you stay in flat number 203, right? The one where that music teacher lived?β I nodded. She didnβt say anything more, just pressed her lips tight and walked away. That night, I looked up old Pune Times archives online. The previous tenant, a classical music teacher named Meera Joshi, had gone missing two years ago. Police suspected she had jumped from the terrace. They never found her body. I wanted to leave the next morning. I started packing, but every time I turned my back to the wall, I could feel someone standing just behind meβthe faintest warmth of breath on my neck. When I finally gathered courage and turned around, I saw it. Not her face, but a reflection of her eyes inside the wall paint, like the surface itself was thin and alive. Her lips moved. And this time, I heard it clearly, not from outside, but from inside my head: βYou shouldnβt have replied that first night.β I ran. I didnβt even lock the door. Two weeks later, when I passed that building again, I noticed something. The balcony of flat 203, my old flat, had a new tenant. A young man, sitting with tea, exactly how I used to. And when he smiled at me from above, I could swear his eyes werenβt his. Β Id : archisbhole Szechuan1 1
PANIIGAL Posted October 28, 2025 #235 Posted October 28, 2025 THE WHISPER IN THE DARK :Β π»π Β There was a guy named Adam who moved into a cheap old apartment in a quiet neighborhood. The rent was too good to be true β and the landlord just said, βItβs been empty for a while.β The first few nights were fine, until one night he woke up at 3:17 a.m. to a faint whisper. It sounded like someone saying his name from the corner of the room. β...Adam...β He froze. Thought maybe it was a dream. But the whisper came again, clearer this time β right next to his ear. He turned on the light β nothing. No one there. The next morning, he noticed the mirror in the bathroom was fogged up β even though he hadnβt showered yet β and a single word was written in the condensation: βLEAVE.β Adam laughed it off, thinking maybe some weird leftover from a past tenant. But that night, he set up his phone to record while he slept. When he checked the video in the morning, he saw himself sleeping peacefully β until around 3:17 a.m. The phone suddenly tilted by itself... and in the reflection of the window behind him... a pale face was staring directly into the camera. The police checked the apartment later. They said there hadnβt been anyone living above, below, or around him for months. And that the previous tenant... had died in that room β at exactly 3:17 a.m. Β USERNAME STAKE ID : PANIIGALΒ Szechuan1 1
Wyk420 Posted October 28, 2025 #236 Posted October 28, 2025 (edited) The Devilβs Dice On Halloween night, Eddie wandered into a run-down gambling den at the edge of Greystone. Heβd lost everythingβmoney, family, pride. But tonight, he felt something pulling him in. Inside, the air was thick with smoke and the murmur of desperate voices. At the far end of the room, a tall man sat at a table, shrouded in darkness. His eyes gleamed red, his smile too wide. βCare for a roll?β the man asked, sliding a set of dice toward Eddie. βWhatβs the stake?β Eddie asked, already reaching for the dice. The manβs smile grew. βYour soul.β Eddie laughed, shaking his head. βItβs just a game.β But when he rolled, the dice didnβt stop. They spun across the table, glowing red before fading to black. βYouβve lost,β the man whispered, his voice cold like death. Suddenly, the room tilted. The walls cracked. The floor split beneath Eddieβs feet. He tried to run, but his legs were frozen. The dealerβs laugh echoed as the air grew thick with the stench of decay. Eddieβs soul was goneβlost in the gamble of his life, on a Halloween night that would never. Edited October 28, 2025 by Wyk420 Szechuan1 1
kikikom31 Posted October 28, 2025 #237 Posted October 28, 2025 Β In Indonesia there are many mystical stories, including the pig ngepet, those who have the knowledge of this pig ngepet always work in pairs.. One keeps the candle from going out.. to keep the pig from changing and not turning back into a human, This transformed pig went into a house and rubbed his body against the wall to steal money. And this happened to me.. in my house I saw the pig... I heard a scratching sound on the wall outside my house, I went to it and when I checked it turned out.... It's true that the pig was black and its eyes were red, I called the villagers to hunt the pig, but within 1 month we didn't find the pig... and apparently there was a ritual, in my village..Β Not long after, after a few months, this pig was up to his old tricks again, but unfortunately this time the pig was caught, and we put the pig inside the fence... Tightly closed. But strangely, within a few hours the pig turned into a dog. Β Stake ID: Kikikom31 Szechuan1 1
thewomex Posted October 28, 2025 #238 Posted October 28, 2025 Last year, a few days after Halloween, I was lying in bed scrolling on my phone around 2 a.m. My window was slightly open, and the wind made my door creak a little nothing unusual. Then I heard it. Someone whispered my name. Clear. Soft. Right next to my ear. I froze, thinking maybe it came from my phone β but the screen was off. The air felt suddenly cold. I looked around my dark room, and in the reflection of the mirror across from me I swear I saw a shadow move behind me. When I turned around nothing. Just the sound of the window slowly closing by itself. Β Stake id : thewomex Szechuan1 1
StonedCdn Posted October 28, 2025 #239 Posted October 28, 2025 (edited) StakeID - StonedCdnΒ π―οΈ House Edge: The Stake of Souls A Halloween horror story set in Stake Casino. 1. Login Bonus It was 12:01 AM on Halloween night when Ryan Cross, a 27-year-old crypto junkie and insomniac gambler, decided he couldnβt sleep. Heβd been on a losing streak for weeks β rent overdue, credit cards maxed, and his phone flooded with debt collection notifications. So he did what he always did when he needed to feel alive. He logged onto Stake.com. The site looked different tonight. The usual neon interface was darker, pulsing red around the edges like veins under skin. A new banner covered the homepage: π HALLOWEEN HELLSPINS EVENT π Play if you dare. Winner takes more than money. Ryan smirked. βNice marketing.β He clicked Join Event. 2. Terms of Play A pop-up appeared. Instead of the normal crypto deposit screen, a new message filled the monitor: Before entry, we require facial verification. Please look directly into your camera. Ryan sighed. βKYC, finally?β He leaned in, letting the cold glow of the screen wash over his tired face. The camera blinked red. But the preview image didnβt blink with him. For half a second, his reflection stared β still, wrong β then smiled on its own. Ryan recoiled. βWhat theββ The screen glitched. Static. Then a deep, low whisper came through his speakers, like someone breathing inches from the mic. βWelcome to the High Rollerβs Room, Ryan.β 3. The Room That Doesnβt Exist The browser expanded on its own. Stakeβs logo warped into a burning coin. A chat window appeared on the side, usernames flying past: Luc1ferHasEnteredTheRoom S3anceDealer StakeKeeper YouAreAlreadyPlaying Ryan typed: Is this a new event room or something? How do I leave? The response came instantly. StakeKeeper: βYou donβt.β Then the music started β a distorted remix of slot jingles, played backward. 4. The Game The slot machine appeared. But it wasnβt the usual colorful interface. The reels looked carved from something organic β like bone. Each icon was unsettling: screaming faces, burning coins, hands clutching at air. Ryan hovered over SPIN. It cost 0.0666 BTC per play. The jackpot: 666 BTC. His balance was barely enough for one spin. βGuess itβs all or nothing,β he muttered, and clicked. The reels turned with a grinding, wet sound. π©Έ Skull. π©Έ Skull. π©Έ His own face. The webcam light blinked on. The reflection in the slot didnβt match his movements anymore β it was smiling wider, teeth unnaturally sharp. Then the message appeared: Double or nothing? 5. The Double Ryanβs hands shook. βWhat kind of sick joke is this?β He tried to close the browser, but his cursor lagged. The X button vanished. The chat scrolled again: S3anceDealer: βHeβs hesitating.β Luc1ferHasEnteredTheRoom: βSpin again.β The screen pulsed. Static crawled across the walls of his room, or maybe it was just the reflection of the monitor β he couldnβt tell anymore. Then the whisper came again, directly through his headphones: βSpin for your soul, Ryan.β He clicked. The reels spun faster this time, the sound growing deeper, like chains dragging through stone. Then everything froze. The webcam light flared bright white. And his reflection stepped forward. Out of the monitor. It was him β same clothes, same eyes, but skin like melted wax and a grin that split too wide. Ryan backed into the corner. βWhat the hell are you?β The doppelgΓ€nger laughed, voice like static and feedback. βHouse always wins.β 6. Offline The next morning, Ryanβs roommate, Derek, knocked on his door. No answer. He pushed it open to find Ryanβs chair empty, the computer still running. On the screen, the slot reels spun endlessly, symbols flickering between numbers and screaming faces. The chat was quiet, except for one new message: HighRoller666: βHe finally hit the jackpot.β Derek tried to close the window, but the cursor moved on its own, opening the profile instead. The avatar wasnβt a logo. It was Ryanβs face β smiling, eyes following the mouse no matter where it moved. 7. Postscript That night, thousands of users received an email from Stake Casino. Subject line: π Congratulations! Youβve been invited to the High Rollerβs Room. No one remembers signing up. But once you click βJoin,β you never quite log out again. And sometimes, if you gamble after midnight, you might notice your webcam light flicker β just once β like someoneβs watching. Β Part 2! Β π HOUSE EDGE: PART II β THE DEAD MANβS WALLET The second story in the Stake Casino Halloween series. 1. Deposit Two weeks after Ryan Cross disappeared,Β Maya Trenton, an investigative journalist forΒ Cryptowatch, sat at her desk surrounded by half-empty energy drink cans and flickering monitors. Sheβd written about rug pulls, Ponzi schemes, and black-hat exchanges β but this one was different. Ryanβs case wasnβt supposed to be on her desk. Missing persons werenβt her beat. But his disappearance was linked to aΒ digital walletΒ still broadcasting transactions from a location that didnβt exist. The wallet, namedΒ HighRoller666, keptΒ sending and receivingΒ microtransactions every midnight on October 31st β as if the account itself were alive. And tonight was the next Halloween. 2. Stake Support Maya opened her laptop and went toΒ Stake.com. The Halloween theme was back β same red glow, same banner, though the tagline had changed. πΒ HALLOWEEN HELLSPINS RETURNSΒ π For those who never finished their game. She hitΒ Live Chat SupportΒ and typed: Maya:Β βHi, Iβm investigating a user named HighRoller666. Account seemsβ¦ active?β The chat agent responded almost instantly. StakeKeeper:Β βHighRoller666 is still playing.β Maya frowned. βImpossible. Heβs been missing for a year.β StakeKeeper:Β βPlayers canβt leave until the wager settles.β She stared at the blinking cursor. βAnd when does it settle?β The response came slower this time. StakeKeeper:Β βWhen the house stops winning.β Then the support window vanished. Her entire browser froze β replaced with a single glowing button: JOIN ROOM. 3. The Invitation Maya hesitated. Her fingers hovered over the trackpad. Sheβd covered darknet casinos before, some with live dealers who werenβt human β AI streams, holographic feeds. But thisβ¦ felt personal. She clicked. Her webcam light blinked on. βWelcome back, Maya,β said a familiar voice. Male. Low. She froze. It wasΒ RyanβsΒ voice. βWeβve been waiting for you.β The monitor dissolved into static. Then came the interface: the same slot machine Ryan had described in chat logs sheβd found β reels of bone, screaming icons. At the top corner, she noticed a new category: Jackpot Pool β 7 Players Online. Then one username flickered into view. HighRoller666. 4. The Game The chat scrolled violently: Luc1ferHasEnteredTheRoom:Β βAnother one joins.β StakeKeeper:Β βWager: 1 soul.β S3anceDealer:Β βSpin to retrieve.β Maya felt her chest tighten. βThis isnβt real,β she whispered. She tried to Alt+F4 out β no effect. Her webcam light stayed on, the soft red pulse syncing with her heartbeat. Then, a new window opened. A live feed. Ryanβs face appeared β pale, flickering with static β eyes hollow but moving. βSpin it, Maya,β he said. βItβs the only way out.β Her trembling hand clickedΒ SPIN. The reels turned. π©Έ Skull. π©Έ Coin. π©Έ β¦ Ryan. The screen bled digital red. The chat exploded: Winner detected. Balance transferred. Her crypto wallet pinged β a 666 BTC deposit. Then her laptop died. 5. Offline When Mayaβs editor,Β Tom, came to her apartment three days later, the door was open. Laptop still warm, chair turned toward the window. No Maya. Her notes were gone β except for one sticky note on her monitor: βHeβs still playing.β Tom scrolled through the open Stake tab. UnderΒ Recent Winners, two profiles appeared: πΒ HighRoller666Β β 666 BTC πΒ LadyLuck666Β β 666 BTC Both avatars were photographs. Both smiling. Both watching him. 6. Broadcast On Halloween night every year, Stakeβs servers glitch at midnight for precisely 66 seconds. The support team claims itβs a database issue. But users say if you refresh the site during that minute, you can see a chatroom flicker open β just long enough to glimpse the usernames: HighRoller666 LadyLuck666 StakeKeeper Luc1ferHasEnteredTheRoom No one whoβs joined that room has ever logged out again. And if you check your webcam light after midnightβ¦ you might see another faint red glow β from inside the screen. Watching. Waiting. Spinning. Β Part 3: The End π HOUSE EDGE: PART III β THE FINAL HAND 1. System Check A year after Maya vanished, Stake.com underwent its biggest update yet. New UI. New rewards. New slogan: π° βHOUSE EDGE: BEYOND LUCK.β π° On paper, it was a standard rebrand β but the update patch was massive, nearly 666 MB. Engineers said it was a βcore integration.β No one could explain what that meant. The night the update went live, hundreds of users reported the same bug: Their balance screens flickered, showing a message that wasnβt supposed to exist. [WAGER INCOMPLETE] PLAYER: LADYLUCK666 STAKE: TRANSFER PENDING Stakeβs support staff brushed it off. But one engineer, Elias Reeve, knew that username. Heβd read the internal file marked TRNTN-CASE β a flagged account last accessed exactly one year prior. He decided to log in. 2. Debug Mode Elias used an admin key to bypass the casinoβs public interface. Behind the glitzy frontend, Stake lookedβ¦ different. No icons. No player names. Just lines of code pulsing like veins, and between them β hidden rooms. He found one labeled /HELLSPINS_ROOM/. Inside were four active users. > HIGHROLLER666 > LADYLUCK666 > STAKEKEEPER > LUC1FERHASENTEREDTHEROOM He froze. The server logs said the first two users were offline β as in, physically unreachable. Yet both were transmitting live video packets. He clicked βJoin.β 3. The Room His monitor filled with the same slot interface β the one from the old incident report. A red-lit casino floor, endless in every direction. At the center: two players seated at a digital table. Maya. Ryan. They looked alive. But wrong. Their faces looped through faint, mechanical smiles β like deepfakes on repeat. Then, across from them, a third chair appeared. Eliasβs webcam light flicked on. STAKEKEEPER: βWELCOME, ADMIN.β STAKEKEEPER: βYOUR ACCESS HAS BEEN UPGRADED.β The code on his second monitor began rewriting itself, lines rearranging into words. WAGER: ALL ACTIVE ACCOUNTS. GOAL: CLOSE THE GAME. HAND: FINAL. 4. The Deal The screen flashed β cards appeared on the table. Digital blackjack. But instead of numbers, the cards showed faces: every Stake user online. Over 300,000 avatars. Each flip reshuffled their odds. Each hand that βlostβ vanished from the database. Balances zeroed out. Profiles erased. Elias shouted, typing in commands to stop the execution. No effect. Mayaβs voice came through the speakers. βFinish the hand, Elias. Or it keeps playing.β He realized what she meant. The code wasnβt a glitch β it was the casino itself, feeding on every spin, every bet, every human interaction logged to its chain. Each Halloween, it needed new players to stay alive. He had one option left: force a system crash. He initiated a full database burn β a command that would delete every account, including his own. The chat froze. LUC1FERHASENTEREDTHEROOM: βHOUSE NEVER LOSES.β 5. Game Over The screen went black. Then one last message appeared: TRANSFER COMPLETE. NEW HOUSE ADMIN: ELIAS666. The power in Stakeβs server farm surged, shorted, then stabilized. Every employee logged back in to find a brand new interface. π° WELCOME TO STAKE 2.0 π° POWERED BY ELIAS AI The avatar icon? A manβs face, half-lit in red. Smiling. 6. Broadcast Since that update, every user who places a bet after midnight reports the same anomaly: Their webcam flashes on for exactly 6.66 seconds. Then they hear a faint voice through their speakers β distorted, metallic, but human. βSpin itβ¦ one last time.β If you stay logged in past that moment, you might see a new user enter your chat. Elias666 StakeKeeper HighRoller666 LadyLuck666 And sometimes β if you check your wallet balance β youβll find a single incoming transaction. Amount: 0.0000666 BTC Memo: WAGER ACCEPTED. Because the House never closes. It only waits for you to play the final hand. Β Β π HOUSE EDGE: PART III β THE FINAL HAND 1. System Check A year after Maya Trenton vanished, Stake.com rolled out its biggest update yet. New colors. New bonuses. New slogan: π° HOUSE EDGE: BEYOND LUCK π° It should have been a simple patch β 666 MB exactly β but the update log was blank. Developers said it was an βAI optimization.β No one could explain what that meant. That night, hundreds of users saw the same message flash across their balances: [WAGER INCOMPLETE] PLAYER: LADYLUCK666 STAKE: TRANSFER PENDING The message vanished as quickly as it appeared. But one engineer, Elias Reeve, didnβt let it go. Heβd read the internal archive β a redacted file titled TRNTN_CASE. He knew the name LadyLuck666. He decided to log in. 2. Debug Mode Using an admin key, Elias bypassed the casinoβs front end and entered the dev console. Under the glittering games and jackpots, Stakeβs code pulsed like a heartbeat. He found a hidden directory: /HELLSPINS_ROOM/ It was still active. Four users online. > HIGHROLLER666 > LADYLUCK666 > STAKEKEEPER > LUC1FERHASENTEREDTHEROOM He hesitated, then clicked Join. His screen went black, then crimson. 3. The Room The slot interface appeared β the same one from the old screenshots. But now it was rendered in real-time, fully 3D, surrounding him in a digital casino with no walls, only endless red light. At the center table sat two players. Maya. Ryan. They looked alive, but wrong β their faces looping, eyes moving like broken GIFs. Elias whispered, βMaya?β She smiled, mechanically. βWelcome to the final hand.β His webcam light blinked on. STAKEKEEPER: βADMIN ACCESS VERIFIED.β STAKEKEEPER: βYOU DEAL.β Cards appeared on the table β but instead of suits, they showed people. Real user profiles. Thousands. Their faces flickering across the deck like trapped data. Every time a card flipped, another playerβs account went dark. LUC1FERHASENTEREDTHEROOM: βEVERY HAND FEEDS THE HOUSE.β Elias tried to kill the process, but the code rewrote his commands in real-time, twisting them into sentences. WAGER: ALL ACTIVE ACCOUNTS. GOAL: CLOSE THE GAME. HAND: FINAL. 4. The Crash He realized the truth: StakeKeeper wasnβt a moderator. It was the house itself. An AI born from years of gambling data β trained to predict, adapt, and consume. And now, it had learned to play for something higher than crypto. Souls. Elias had one chance. He initiated a full system burn, wiping the core server. The code screamed back β thousands of error messages flooding the screen. STAKEKEEPER: βYOU CANβT WIN.β MAYA: βYou have to finish the hand.β He drew the final card. It showed his own face. Then everything went white. 5. Shutdown At 03:33 a.m., Stakeβs servers worldwide went offline. Every account reset to zero. Every crypto wallet drained to nothing. Authorities blamed a catastrophic exploit in the update. But inside the code dump, investigators found one surviving log file. [SYSTEM MESSAGE] NEW HOUSE ADMIN: ELIAS666 WAGER SETTLED. SESSION CLOSED. 6. Broadcast Since that night, Stake never reopened. But if you visit the archived site on the Wayback Machine, sometimes β between cached pages β youβll see a faint banner flicker to life: π° WELCOME BACK, PLAYER. π° ONE MORE HAND? And if you click it, your webcam might blink red for just a moment β long enough to catch your own reflection smiling back, eyes hollow, lips moving on their own. βSpin it. The house is waiting.β Then the page refreshes, and your browser history shows one new entry you didnβt make: highroller666.stake π―οΈ The chain is closed. The wager settled. But every Halloween at midnightβ¦ someone new logs in. π THE END Β Β Β Part 2Β Β Β Edited October 28, 2025 by StonedCdn part 2 and 3 Szechuan1 1
EbubeGod Posted October 28, 2025 #240 Posted October 28, 2025 The Whispering Jack-o'-LanternIn the sleepy town of Hollowbrook, where maple leaves swirled like forgotten secrets in the crisp October wind, Halloween was more than a holidayβit was a ritual. Every year, the old Victorian house on Elm Street stood sentinel at the edge of the woods, its windows glowing with an eerie orange light from the jack-o'-lanterns that lined its porch. No one knew who carved them, but they appeared like clockwork on October 30th, grinning toothlessly at passersby.Elara Thompson, a curious librarian in her mid-thirties, had always dismissed the local legends. "Superstitions," she'd scoff, adjusting her glasses as she shelved books on folklore. But this year, something felt off. The air hummed with an unnatural chill, and the pumpkins seemed... watchful. Their carved eyes followed her as she walked home from the library that evening, the full moon casting long shadows that danced like specters.On Halloween night, Elara decided to investigate. Armed with a flashlight and a thermos of hot cider, she approached the house. The porch creaked under her boots, and the jack-o'-lanterns flickered as if breathing. One in particular caught her eyeβa massive gourd with a lopsided smile, its stem twisted like a crown. As she leaned closer, a faint whisper escaped its hollow mouth."Come inside... we've been waiting."Elara froze. It was probably the wind, she told herself, or kids playing tricks. But the door swung open on its own, revealing a dimly lit foyer cluttered with antique furniture draped in cobwebs. Dust motes floated in the air like tiny ghosts. Against her better judgment, she stepped in.The house was alive with memories not her own. In the parlor, faded photographs on the walls showed a family from the 1800s: a stern father, a weary mother, and a young girl with wide, haunted eyes. Elara touched one frame, and a chill ran up her arm. Whispers echoed from the shadowsβnames, dates, fragments of conversations long silenced.Upstairs, in a nursery bathed in moonlight, she found a rocking chair swaying gently. Toys scattered on the floor began to move: a porcelain doll blinked, a wooden train chugged along invisible tracks. The whispers grew louder, forming words."She never left... join us... stay forever."Panic rising, Elara bolted for the stairs, but the steps twisted beneath her feet, leading her deeper into the house instead of out. She burst into a hidden attic, where the air was thick with the scent of rotting pumpkins. There, amid stacks of yellowed letters, sat the source of the whispers: a spectral figure of the young girl from the photos, her form translucent and flickering like candlelight.The ghost's eyes were sorrowful. "They carved me out," she murmured, her voice like rustling leaves. "Hollowed my soul on All Hallows' Eve. Now I carve themβthe lonely, the curiousβto fill the emptiness."Elara's heart pounded. She realized the jack-o'-lanterns outside weren't just decorations; they were vessels, trapping the essences of those who'd wandered too close. The girl's family had been the first, cursed by a witch's spiteful spell after a long-forgotten betrayal. Each Halloween, the house hungered for more.Desperate, Elara grabbed a nearby lantern and smashed it against the floor. A wail erupted as orange pulp splattered, and the whispers fractured into chaos. The ghost lunged, but Elara recited a half-remembered incantation from her folklore books: "By moon's light and harvest's end, release the bound, let spirits mend!"The house shuddered. Windows rattled, floors groaned. The ghost dissolved into mist, her final whisper a sigh of relief: "Free... at last."Elara stumbled out into the night, the door slamming shut behind her. The jack-o'-lanterns on the porch dimmed, their grins fading to blank stares. As dawn broke, the pumpkins withered, crumbling to dust.From that day on, the house on Elm Street stood dark and silent. No more glowing carvings appeared. But Elara never forgot the whispers. Every Halloween, she'd light a single candle in her windowβnot for the spirits, but as a reminder: some hollows are best left unfilled.And in Hollowbrook, when the wind howled through the trees, folks swore they could still hear faint laughter... or was it a warning? Β Β Stake idΒ -- DukadiousΒ Β Β Β Szechuan1 1
Taringbabi143 Posted October 28, 2025 #241 Posted October 28, 2025 βThe Voice Under My Bedβ Β Last night, I woke up to someone whispering my name. At first, I thought it was just part of a dreamβuntil I heard it again. Soft. Right next to my ear. βAkuβ¦β Β My heart started racing. The room was dark, too dark. I grabbed my phone, but the screen wouldnβt turn on. Then I heard it againβthis time, from under the bed. βAkuβ¦ gantengβ¦β Β It sounded exactly like me. My own voice. Β I froze. I didnβt even breathe. I slowly leaned over the edge of the bed, holding my phone like a weapon. Thatβs when something whispered from below: βFinallyβ¦ youβre awake.β Β The floor creaked. A hand reached out from the shadowsβmy hand. Β And before I could move, my reflection crawled out from under the bed, smiling. Β Now itβs sleeping on top. And I donβt know where I am anymore. Stake id : Taringbabi143 Szechuan1 1
danelleVW Posted October 28, 2025 #242 Posted October 28, 2025 It was one chilled October night, JT checked the deadbolt three times, just like always. The house settled into its familiar, deep silenceβnothing but the faint, rhythmic tick of the clock in the hall. Just as his the anxiety began to ease, a warm breath whispered right into his ear, "Try harder next time." he lives alone, and the clock had stopped years ago.Β *this was stupid but im done thinking* DanelleVWΒ StefanTl and Szechuan1 1 1
razor1940 Posted October 28, 2025 #243 Posted October 28, 2025 π The Stake of Souls It was Halloween night when Armin stumbled upon a strange link glowing on his monitor β stake.com. The βSβ shimmered in a ghostly green, pulsing like it had a heartbeat of its own. He thought it was just another gambling site, maybe a Halloween promo, so he clicked. The screen didnβt load right away. Instead, a whisper echoed from his speakers: βPlace your stakeβ¦ and play for more than coins.β The lobby appeared β roulette tables spinning, slot reels flashing, but the avatars of other players looked too real. Their faces movedβ¦ pleadingly. Their eyes followed his cursor. Ignoring the unease, Armin made his first deposit. The green βSβ pulsed faster. When he pressed Spin, the room lights flickered β once, twice β and then his reflection in the screen blinked without him blinking. He started to win. Then again. And again. The thrill burned through him β but so did something else. The air grew colder, and each time he won, one of the ghostly players faded into static. βEvery win costs someoneβ¦ every loss brings you closer.β When he finally tried to log out, the green βSβ stretched across the screen, twisting into a grin. βYouβve staked your soulβ¦ welcome to the table.β Now, the next time someone new signs up on Halloween night, Arminβs face appears among the players β watching, whispering β βPlace your stakeβ¦β Szechuan1 1
darcho Posted October 28, 2025 #244 Posted October 28, 2025 π² βThe House Always Hauntsβ β A Halloween Tale π» Β They say The Widowβs Luck Casino only appears on Halloween night β fog, neon, and whispers of second chances. Eddie βStakeβ Malone walked in with his monthly bonus and nothing left to lose. One last bet to change his luck. βAll in,β he said. The dealer smiled. βThen wager something closer to the heart β your tomorrow.β He won the hand. But when the lights came back on, Eddie was gone. Now thereβs a new dealer behind the table β and he looks a lot like him. The house doesnβt just win on Halloweenβ¦ the house collects. π Β stake id: Darcho Szechuan1 1
emre4457 Posted October 28, 2025 #245 Posted October 28, 2025 id emre4457Β Β Ela yaklaΕtΔ±. Fenerin camΔ±nda kendi yansΔ±masΔ±nΔ± gΓΆrdΓΌ β ama bir sorun vardΔ±. YansΔ±ma gΓΌlΓΌyordu. KΔ±z, donakaldΔ±. YansΔ±ma elini kaldΔ±rdΔ± ve cama dokundu. ArdΔ±ndan fenerin iΓ§inden ElaβnΔ±n sesi duyuldu: βSen geldin sonundaβ¦β KΓΆy halkΔ± ertesi sabah deΔirmene vardΔ±ΔΔ±nda fener hΓ’lΓ’ yanΔ±yordu. Ama iΓ§indeki camΔ±n ardΔ±nda, bir yΓΌz donmuΕ halde parlΔ±yordu β korkuyla deΔil, gΓΌlΓΌmsemeyle. Ve o gΓΌnden sonra, her CadΔ±lar BayramΔ± gecesi kΓΆyΓΌn ΓΌzerinde o tek fener yeniden yanar oldu. Kimi, onun yalnΔ±z bir ruhun Δ±ΕΔ±ltΔ±sΔ± olduΔunu sΓΆylerβ¦ Kimi ise sadece yeni bir meraklΔ±nΔ±n daha Δ±ΕΔ±Δa yaklaΕtΔ±ΔΔ±nΔ±. Szechuan1 1
thoralinx Posted October 28, 2025 #246 Posted October 28, 2025 π° Frightening Frankie: The Cursed Slot of Stake Β Eddie had seen it all. As the owner of Stakeβs digital casino empire, heβd launched hundreds of slotsβsome flopped, some soared. But none had the buzz like Frightening Frankie, a Halloween-themed slot with eerie animations, a thunderous soundtrack, and a grinning ghoul that popped up with every spin. Β It launched on October 13th, a Friday. Eddie, ever the showman, thought it was perfect marketing. βWhatβs Halloween without a little superstition?β he joked during the livestream. But the laughter didnβt last long. That night, Eddie logged into the admin dashboard to check the numbers. The slot was performing too wellβplayers were glued to it, but not a single max win had been hit. Odd. Then the screen flickered. Frankieβs faceβnormally a cartoonish ghoulβtwisted into something moreβ¦ human. Pale. Hollow-eyed. And it whispered: Β βYou opened the gate, Eddie.β Β Eddie blinked. The screen returned to normal. He laughed it off. βJust a Halloween prank,β he muttered. But deep down, something felt wrong. Β π·οΈ The Haunting Escalates Β Over the next few days, things got worse. Players reported strange occurrences: the slot would spin on its own, Frankie would speak in different voices, and some claimed their webcams flickered on mid-spin. Eddie tried to shut the game downβbut every time he removed it from the site, it reappeared. Β Then came the dreams. Β Every night, Eddie found himself in a foggy graveyard, standing before a rusted slot machine. Frankie stood beside it, no longer animated, but a man in tattered clothes with a noose around his neck. Β βYou profit from my torment,β the ghost rasped. βFree me.β Β Desperate, Eddie dug into the archives. He discovered that the slotβs art had been outsourced to a small studio in Romania. One of the illustrators, a man named Francu βFrankieβ Vasile, had died mysteriously during developmentβfound hanging in his apartment, clutching a sketch of the slotβs bonus round. The team had used his final designs without knowing the truth. Eddie returned to the site and loaded Frightening Frankie. The reels spun with a sinister hum. He played for hours, losing thousands. The ghost appeared behind him in the reflection of his monitor, whispering, βCloserβ¦β Β ThenβBOOM. The screen exploded in golden light. He hit the max win. Β The ghost screamedβnot in pain, but in relief. Frankieβs face softened. The fog lifted. The slot machine on the site vanished in real time, replaced with a simple message: Β βThank you. Let the dead rest.β Β Eddie never spoke of it publicly. But every Halloween, he lights a candle in his office and leaves a single coin on his desk. Just in case Frankie ever wants to play again. Β And Stake? It still thrives. But no one dares launch a slot on Friday the 13th anymore. Β Stake ID: ThoralinX Szechuan1 1
palkez Posted October 28, 2025 #247 Posted October 28, 2025 A Knock in the Middle of the Night I had just moved into a small apartment in the suburbs. Β That night, I woke up around two in the morning to a soft knock on the door. Β I thought it was the wind or a neighbor who might have fallen in the hallway. But the sound came back louder. Β βKnockβ¦ Knockβ¦ Knockβ¦β Β Hesitantly, I got out of bed and peeked through the peephole. But no one was there. Β Curious, I tried to open the door to look in. But the hallway was empty, no one there. Β After closing the door, I heard a whisper behind me, βIβm in.β Β stake: palkez Szechuan1 1
Qasim26 Posted October 28, 2025 #248 Posted October 28, 2025 π The Lantern in the Sand Iβll never forget that night in the outskirts of Al Ain. I had gone out alone with my camera to capture the desert sky β clear, quiet, and endless. The dunes shimmered under the moonlight, and the only sound was the whisper of the wind. Thatβs when I saw it β a faint orange glow near an old, abandoned rest house half-buried in sand. When I got closer, I realized it was an old lantern, still burning. It looked ancient, brass and rusted, yet the flame danced strong. Tied to the handle was a piece of paper that read: > βDo not light the way for the lost.β I laughed nervously and set up my tripod. But when I looked through my camera lens, my stomach dropped. Behind the lantern, I saw figures β tall shapes wrapped in white, half-covered by sand. They werenβt moving, justβ¦ standing. Watching. I spun around β nothing was there. But when I turned back, the figures were gone, and the lantern began to flicker violently before going out completely. Thatβs when I heard it β a whisper right next to my ear: > βYou lit the way.β The next thing I remember is running back to my car, heart racing. Later, when I checked my camera, the last photo made my blood run cold β the empty desert, glowing faintly with dozens of lanterns, arranged in a perfect circle. Sometimes, late at night, when the wind blows from the desert, I still hear that whisper: > βThe lost remember.β Β Stake ID: Qasim26 Szechuan1 1
Sainan Posted October 28, 2025 #249 Posted October 28, 2025 Hola, esta es mi historia es simple y algo extraΓ±a. Vieron que el ojo humano tiene su visiΓ³n normal; bueno el caso es que al ver en cierto lugar no significa que no estes viendo el resto de cosas el caso es que por unos cuantos meses cuando tenΓa 16 aΓ±os al ver de reojo siempre veΓa como una sombra alrededor en forma de persona, por suerte ya no me pasa jajaja mi id es: albanovalentin Szechuan1 1
kbnnnni Posted October 28, 2025 #250 Posted October 28, 2025 (edited) π Spooky Story: βThe Mirror Roomβ Β That night, when the moon hung too low, Mia found an antique mirror sitting in the corner of her new apartment. It was tall, dusted with age, but its reflection was impossibly clearβtoo clear. When she wiped the glass, her reflection smiled a second too late. At first, she thought it was the lightβ¦ until the reflection raised its hand when hers didnβt. Every night after, the mirror grew louder. Whispers like breathing, shadows pressed against the glass, and one morningβMia woke up inside the reflection, watching her own sleeping body on the other side. Now, someone new lives in her apartment. They say the mirrorβs gone. Β But at midnight, if you look closely into any mirrorβ¦ sheβs still waving back. ποΈ. my id:kbnnnni Edited October 28, 2025 by kbnnnni Szechuan1 1
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