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Posted

πŸŒ™ The Last Knock at Willow Creek πŸ—οΈ

The old house on Willow Creek Lane never gave out candy. Local legend said the original owner, Elias, still wandered the halls, searching for his lost key. Tonight, two teenagers, masked as ghosts, dared each other to knock.

"Trick or treat, Elias!" they yelled, their voices shaking.

The door creaked open, revealing only blackness. They laughed, a nervous, shaky sound. As they turned to run, a cold, dry hand clamped onto the shoulder of the boy, Alex.

"You came," a voice rasped, like dried leaves scraping stone. "The treats are gone. But I still need the key."

Alex felt a heavy, rusted object press into his palm. It was the key. He looked back; the doorway was empty. The mask on his friend, Liam, was no longer a smile. It was a silent, gaping O of terror. Liam wasn't moving.

Alex ran, dropping the key in the mud. He never saw Liam again. The next morning, a single, perfectly carved, smiling jack-o'-lantern sat on Alex's porch. It wasn't his. And where the stem should have been, a small, rusted key was embedded.

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ID : yokkorasyo

Posted

La historia comienza a partir de que lees esta espeluznante realidad. Los usuarios estΓ‘n muy tranquilos jugando apostando sin saber que una vez cerrado el tema todos sus saldos en cualquier tipo de moneda desapaceran de manera inmediata de sus cuentas y no podrΓ‘n reclamar nada, vengo del futuro les deseo suerte ya que sus saldos aparecerΓ‘n en mi cuenta jaja saludos

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Id: cristianbrav06

Posted

Sis Yutmaz Ev

Kasabanın kenarında, yolun sonundaki o eski ev yıllardır kimsenin ânünden geçmek istemediği türdendi. Perdeleri hep kapalıydı, bahçesindeki otlar diz boyuna kadar uzanmıştı. Ama en tuhafı, evin etrafından hiç eksilmeyen ince bir sis tabakasıydı; gündüz bile dağılmaz, rüzgÒrla bile kıpırdamazdı.

Bu yΔ±l CadΔ±lar BayramΔ± akşamΔ±, kasabanΔ±n Γ§ocuklarΔ± ellerinde plastik kovalarda şeker toplarken, iΓ§lerinden biri β€”Miraβ€” β€œHadi, oraya da gidelim,” dedi. Diğerleri ΓΆnce gΓΌlüştΓΌ, sonra birbirlerinin yΓΌzΓΌne baktΔ±. Cesaret yarışına dΓΆnmüştΓΌ iş.

Bahçe kapısını ittiler, bekledikleri gibi gıcırdamadı. Kapı, sanki uzun süredir birini bekliyormuş gibi sessizce açıldı. İçeriden yanık kabak ve erimiş mum karışımı bir koku yayıldı. Evin salonundaki aynada çocukların yansımaları yoktu.

Bir anlΔ±k sessizlikte, tavandaki Γ§atlaklardan ince toz bulutlarΔ± dΓΆkΓΌldΓΌ. Sonra neredeyse fΔ±sΔ±ltΔ± halinde, bir kadΔ±n sesi duyuldu:
β€œΕžeker almaya mΔ± geldiniz… yoksa yerinizi bΔ±rakmaya mΔ±?”

Γ‡ocuklar çığlΔ±k bile atamadan dışarΔ± fΔ±rladΔ±. Sokaklar sisle kaplΔ±ydΔ±; hangi yΓΆne koştuklarΔ±nΔ± kimse hatΔ±rlamΔ±yordu.

Ertesi sabah, anneler Γ§ocuklarΔ±nΔ± uyandΔ±rmaya gittiklerinde odalar boştu. Sadece Mira’nΔ±n yatağınΔ±n başucunda bir avuΓ§ taze kavrulmuş kabak Γ§ekirdeği duruyordu.

O günden sonra o evin pencerelerinde bazen küçük ışıklar gârülür oldu. Kapısına kimse yaklaşmadı. Ama her Cadılar Bayramı gecesi, rüzgÒr kasabanın üzerinden geçerken, sisin içinden belli belirsiz bir kahkaha duyulur:
β€œΕžeker almaya mΔ± geldiniz?”


Tariktan54

Posted

In the fog-cloaked village of Hollow’s End, Halloween was never just a holidayβ€”it was a warning. Every year, villagers heard whispers that something haunted Marla’s abandoned house at the edge of the woods, its blackened windows reflecting no light and no life. Most dared not approach, but on one restless October evening, Eli, emboldened by his friends’ teasing, crept up and left a single pumpkin on her porchβ€”a dare sealed with a knife-scratch carving and a nervous laugh.

But by morning, the pumpkin hadn’t merely movedβ€”it had changed. Its skin was slick as flesh, eyes too deep, and the mouth twisted impossibly wide. As the days crept toward Halloween, the pumpkin remained untouched by rot. At night, Eli would swear he heard it whisper his name on the wind.

On Halloween, drawn by a nightmare he couldn’t shake, Eli returned. The pumpkin’s face had split open, seeping a thick, dark sap that bled into the wooden steps. The door swung open, and Eli, paralyzed with fear, watched a thin, spindly hand reach out and snatch him inside. He screamed, but the night swallowed his voice. Nobody answered the door to his desperate poundingβ€”just the wind, and the sound of leaves skittering away.

By morning, the house was empty as ever. But two pumpkins now sat on the porch, one with Eli’s frightened eyes forever carved into its face, both grinning through blackened, dripping fangs.

That Halloween, no child ever dared walk the crooked lane againβ€”because the pumpkins never rotted, and their eyes always watched for the next visitor.

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Stake ID : TheBoss10

Posted

When he finished, the candle inside flickered strangely β€” once, twice β€” then glowed blood-red. The air turned cold. Henry laughed nervously, thinking it was the wind.

Then the pumpkin blinked.

Its carved grin widened, splitting deeper into the rind. The word Stake began to pulse like a heartbeat. Henry stumbled back as the pumpkin’s stubby arms β€” the ones he’d carved for fun β€” reached out, scraping along the table.

β€œNice work…” it rasped, voice hollow as the autumn wind. β€œNow it’s your turn to glow.”

They found Henry the next morning β€” his skin orange, his eyes hollow, and a candle burning behind his grin

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stakeid : pinkflamingo

Posted

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The Reflection That Blinked

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There was once a woman who lived alone in a small, creaking house on the edge of town. It wasn’t old enough to be charming, but old enough that the pipes moaned and the floorboards groaned with every step. She’d grown used to the soundsβ€”until one winter night, when she realized one of them was breathing.

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She was brushing her teeth, staring absently into the bathroom mirror, when she heard it. A slow, rasping exhale behind her.

She froze, toothpaste foaming in her mouth. Her reflection didn’t move.

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She turned aroundβ€”nothing. Just the empty hallway, the shadows stretching longer than they should have.

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When she looked back at the mirror, her reflection smiled.

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But she wasn’t smiling.

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The reflection lifted its hand, slowly, like it was testing her. She dropped her toothbrush. The reflection didn’t. It just stared, grin widening, until its lips parted and a whisper seemed to slide through the glassβ€”

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β€œI’ve been watching from your side.”

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The lights flickered.

When they steadied, the woman was gone.

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Only the mirror remainedβ€”showing a bathroom that looked perfectly ordinary…

except for a faint, foggy handprint on the inside of the glass.

Posted

On Halloween night, in a quiet village, a tiny lantern flickered in an old, forgotten house. Inside, a curious cat named Whiskers discovered a shimmering, ghostly clock on the wall. As the clock struck midnight, the room filled with a soft, enchanting glow, and Whiskers felt a gentle, cool breeze brush past. Suddenly, a friendly spirit appeared, offering Whiskers a tiny pumpkin-shaped kindness. With a happy purr, Whiskers knew that even the spookiest night could hold a little magicβ€”and a lot of kindness.
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LockKeith

Posted

The Mystery of the Old Lollipop

The attic air hung thick and dusty, smelling of forgotten leather and moth-eaten wool. Liam was clearing out his grandmother’s cluttered Victorian house before it was sold, a task that was mostly tedious until he found the box. It wasn't labeled "treasures" or "memories," just "MISC," tucked behind a moth-eaten wedding dress.

Inside, nestled on a bed of yellowed tissue paper, was a single, perfect lollipop.

It wasn't a modern candy; it was a relic. The spiraled treat was unnaturally preservedβ€”a rich, deep purple, almost black, fading into a sickly pale green. The stick was thin, bleached wood. But the strangest thing was the smell: not of sugar, but of cold earth and faint, sweet cloves.

"Weird," Liam muttered, picking it up. The moment his fingers closed around the stick, a chill that had nothing to do with the drafty attic raced up his arm. He felt a sudden, inexplicable sense of giggle and loss, followed by the faint sound of a music box tinkling, yet there was no music box in sight.

Liam dismissed it as low blood sugar from hours of work, but the lollipop kept drawing his attention. He took it downstairs and placed it on his bedside table.

That night, he woke up to a faint, rhythmic tap-tap-tap. It was coming from the bedside table. He flicked on the light. The lollipop was still there, but the dark purple candy seemed to shimmer. He saw something reflected in its slick surface: a pair of wide, frightened brown eyes staring back at him.

He sprang out of bed, heart hammering, and grabbed the lollipop, throwing it into a bottom dresser drawer.

The next morning, the drawer was slightly ajar. The lollipop was back on the bedside table. Now, the wooden stick looked gnawed, and a tiny chip was missing from the green swirl.

Terror began to mix with a desperate curiosity. Liam decided to research the house's history. He found an old local newspaper clipping: β€œChild vanishes from Elm Street home, 1948.” The missing child was a seven-year-old girl named Clara, who was last seen playing hide-and-seek in the attic. Her case was never solved.

In the clipping, a black-and-white photograph showed Clara. And in her hand, she was holding a lollipopβ€”a spiral of dark purple and pale green.

Liam raced back to the attic, the cursed candy clutched tight in his hand. He looked at the spot where he found the box. The faint tinkle of the music box was louder now.

"Clara?" he whispered.

The air around him turned icy. Suddenly, he understood. The lollipop wasn't just the last thing she touched; it was the anchor for her lonely, frustrated spirit, tapping, always tapping, waiting for someone to find her game.

He set the lollipop down on the dusty floorboards. "You're safe now," he said, speaking to the wood and the dust. He took a single step back.

The music box sound stopped instantly. The lollipop’s strange color dimmed, turning to an ordinary, dusty gray. When Liam returned an hour later, the lollipop, the box, and the memory of the cold earth scent were gone, replaced only by the stale, empty smell of a very old attic. He never knew if Clara found peace, but he didn't stick around to find out. The house sold the next week.

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stake: dilahdong123

Posted

t was 2:13 in the morning when my phone rang β€” and honestly, that alone was enough to freak me out. No one calls me at that hour. I answered, half-asleep, and all I heard was static… and breathing. Then a voice came through β€” my own voice β€” whispering, β€œDon’t look outside.” And just like that, the call ended. My stomach dropped. I live alone, and in the reflection of my TV screen, I could’ve sworn I saw someone standing behind me.

I tried to shake it off, but curiosity got the better of me. I walked to the window and pulled the curtain just a little. There was someone standing on my lawn β€” completely still, facing my window. My phone started ringing again. Same number. I picked it up with shaking hands, and my voice β€” that same voice β€” said, β€œYou shouldn’t have looked.” The line cut off.

Then my screen lit up one more time β€” not a call, not a text β€” a live video feed. From my own phone camera. I looked down at the feed… and the figure outside was gone. But in the video, something was moving β€” slowly rising from behind my couch.

Posted

The Devil’s Spin 🎰

It was 3 AM on Halloween when Luke logged into Stake for one last spin.
The chat was empty β€” except for one message:

β€œPlay Blood Fortune. One spin. Max bet.”

He’d never seen that slot before, but curiosity won.
The screen pulsed red as reels shaped like bones spun faster and faster. Then it stopped.

🎰 JACKPOT β€” $666,666.66

Luke laughed β€” until the lights went out. His monitor stayed on, showing his reflection.
But it wasn’t moving like him.

It smiled.

Then a voice whispered through his speakers:

β€œA deal’s a deal.”

The next morning, his chair was empty β€” computer still running.
His Stake account showed one last bet… placed after 3:33 AM, while his PC was off.
And the new top user in the chat was named TheCollector666.


Stake ID: krasen88

Posted

πŸŒ• β€œThe Stake in the Garden” πŸŒ•

Old man Harrow always warned the children never to play near his garden after dark. They thought it was just because of his temper β€” until one night, a dare went too far.

Three kids crept behind his crooked fence, flashlights flickering through the fog. The garden was dead silent, except for the creak of the scarecrow stake in the middle patch β€” tall, jagged, and blackened as if burned long ago.

Then it moved.

The wood groaned and twisted, pulling itself free from the soil. Its hollow eyes blazed orange. Roots snapped like bones. It whispered in a voice like splintering timber:
β€œHe fed me once… I’m hungry again.”

By morning, Harrow’s garden was blooming bright red. The townsfolk said it hadn’t grown that well in years.

But if you look close enough… some of the flowers have teeth. πŸŒΉπŸ‘οΈ

StakeIDΒ KittyPerry

Posted

It sounds like you want a short, realistic, and spooky storyβ€”the kind that makes you pause and look over your shoulder.
Here is a piece of flash fiction that aims to feel suddenly, chillingly real:
πŸ“± The Night Shift
My late shift ended at 3:30 AM. The office was on the sixth floor of a building with slow, automated elevators. Every night, I’d step in and press "1," watching the floor display count down: 6... 5...
Last Tuesday, I pressed the button, and the doors closed. I felt the initial drop, but then the elevator stopped. The display still read "6."
I pressed the button again. Nothing. I tried the emergency call. Silence.
A knot tightened in my chest. Then, I noticed the thin crack in the metal of the opposite door. Something was pressed right against it, close enough to deform the thin metal slightly.
I heard a soft, wet sniff from the other side.
The digital display blinked once, and a new number appeared, overriding the "6."
It was "7."
I was on the sixth floor, and there were only six floors in the building.
I didn't press anything. I just stood, frozen, listening to the thin, wet sound of slow breathing until the screen flickered, the doors opened to the empty, brightly lit lobby, and I ran without looking back.
Did that hit the right note for a short, realistic scare, or would you prefer a slightly longer ghost story?

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stake : Jammy404

Posted

stake: FelixOtello

enjoyed the story!

The last ferry from Circular Quay had left hours ago, and the Sydney Harbour fog pressed against the windows of the old ferryman’s cottage like a living thing. You were thirty-four, mate, and you’d come back to Australia after ten years in London, chasing the ghost of a life you’d left behind. The inheritance was supposed to be simple: a crumbling weatherboard on the Hawkesbury River, a tinny with a busted outboard, and a box of your uncle’s things. You’d planned to sell it all, pocket the cash, and piss off to Bali before the taxman noticed.But the river had other ideas.You found the box in the crawlspace under the house, wedged between termite-chewed beams and a rusted esky. Inside: a Polaroid of you at six, gap-toothed and sunburnt, holding a barramundi twice your size; a cassette tape labeled β€œDO NOT PLAY” in your uncle’s spidery hand; and a single object wrapped in oilskin. You unwrapped it under the single bulb, and the air turned cold enough to frost your breath.It was a boomerang.
Not the tourist-shop kind. This one was old, carved from ironbark so dark it drank the light. The grain swirled like smoke, and along the curve someone had burned a pattern: tiny stick figures running, mouths open in silent screams. You turned it over. On the back, in the same hand as the tape: β€œIt always comes back. Don’t throw it after dark.”You laughed. You were thirty-four, not six. You’d seen worse than ghost stories in the London Underground at 3 a.m. You took the boomerang and the tape out to the verandah, the river lapping black and slow below. The cassette player was older than you, but it whirred to life with a sound like a dying cockatoo. Your uncle’s voice crackled through:

β€œIf you’re hearing this, I’m gone. The thing in the mangroves took me. It’s been waiting since ’89. You remember the storm? The one that tore the roof off the shed? That’s when it started. I threw the boomerang to scare off the dingoes. It came back wrong. Carried something with it. Something that wears faces.”

Static. Then a whisper, not your uncle’s: β€œThrow it again, mate. See what comes home.”You should’ve burned the tape. Should’ve driven to Sydney and never looked back. But the river was in your blood, and the boomerang was warm in your hand, pulsing like a heartbeat. You were thirty-four, and you’d spent a decade running from the kid who believed in bunyips and drop bears. Time to prove you were bigger than that.You walked down to the water’s edge. The mangroves leaned over the bank like old men, roots clawing into the mud. The moon was a slit of bone. You drew back your arm (muscle memory from a thousand childhood throws) and let it fly.It cut the air with a sound like tearing silk.
It vanished into the dark.You waited.
Nothing. Just the lap of the river and the distant croak of a frog. You laughed, shaky, and turned to go.Then you heard it.
A whump-whump-whump, low and wet, coming from the mangroves. Not the boomerang’s clean arc. This was heavier. Slap of wood on water. Slap of something else.The boomerang burst from the trees, spinning slow, dripping. It landed at your feet with a sound like a body hitting mud. But it wasn’t alone.Clinging to it was a hand.
Grey-green, webbed between the fingers, nails black and split. It flexed once, then let go. The boomerang rolled to a stop. The hand crawled toward you on its knuckles, leaving a trail of river slime and something darker.You ran.
Up the bank, boots slipping in mud, heart hammering like a V8. Behind you, the mangroves moved. Branches cracked. Something big splashed into the water, following. You reached the house, slammed the door, and wedged a chair under the handle. The cassette player was still on the table, tape spinning. Your uncle’s voice, looped:

β€œIt wears faces. Whatever you love most, that’s what it’ll be.”

You looked out the window.
The thing stood on the lawn, moonlight glinting off wet skin. It was tall, hunched, with too many joints. And its faceβ€” It was yours.
But wrong. The eyes were black glass, reflecting the river. The mouth stretched too wide, showing teeth like river stones. It raised the boomerang, mimicking your throw from earlier. Then it smiled your smile, the one you used in London bars to charm free drinks.It threw.The boomerang smashed through the window, glass exploding inward. You dove aside as it buried itself in the wall, quivering. The thing outside laughedβ€”your laugh, but hollow, like it was coming from underwater.You grabbed the oilskin from the box. Inside was a second object: a jar of salt, coarse and grey, labeled in your uncle’s hand: β€œRiver won’t cross it. Fire neither.” You didn’t think. You ripped the lid off and poured a circle around yourself on the floorboards. The salt hissed where it touched the wood, smoking like dry ice.The door buckled. The thing pressed its faceβ€”your faceβ€”against the glass, breath fogging it in ragged bursts. It whispered, in your voice:

β€œC’mon, mate. Just one throw. For old times.”

You were thirty-four, and you’d never believed in anything. But the salt held. The thing paced, boomerang dragging behind it like a tail. Dawn was hours away. The river kept lapping, patient.You sat in the circle, knees to chest, and waited for the sun to burn the fog away. The boomerang hummed on the wall, eager. Outside, the thing sang your childhood songs, off-key, in a voice that cracked like mangroves in a storm.When the first light finally bled across the water, the thing was gone. The boomerang lay cold and silent. But the salt circle was broken in one placeβ€”a single footprint, webbed and clawed, leading toward the river.You’re thirty-four, mate.
And the river’s still hungry.

Posted

I can't stop thinking about Stake

Everytime i openned X, there is Stake related posts

Everytime i openned Telegram, i saw Stake Daily Hunt challenges

Everytime i openned Kick, millions of stream gambling on Stake

What spooky about it? Because, just thinking about Stake can make money disappear

Stake = Undamned

Posted

πŸŽƒ β€œThe Midnight Email” πŸ‘»

That Halloween night, the town was wrapped in a thick, ghostly fog.
The streets were empty β€” even the wind seemed to be holding its breath.

A man in his early thirties sat at his rented room’s desk, absentmindedly browsing his laptop.
The winter chill slipped through the window, its icy fingers gently tapping the glass.

At exactly 1:00 a.m., his laptop clicked β€” on its own.
The screen flickered to life, showing a single glowing line of text:

Subject: πŸŽƒ Stake Halloween Special Invitation 🎁

He froze for a moment, then clicked to open it.

The background was a dim photograph of a jack-o’-lantern.
Beneath it, a single sentence appeared:

β€œJoin the Midnight Challenge to receive your November reward early.
Press ENTER to accept.”

The man chuckled, thinking it was just a prank, and pressed the Enter key.

The screen instantly went black.
Then, one after another, hundreds of emails began popping up β€”
covering the entire screen like a blizzard of digital snow.

Every message came from a different sender,
but the subject lines were all the same:

β€œYou received it too, didn’t you?”

The webcam light suddenly turned green β€”
someone was controlling his computer remotely?

He snapped the laptop shut,
but a soft notification sound whispered in his ear:

β€œDing β€” You’ve got a new email.”

The lid of the laptop slowly lifted by itself.
On the screen appeared a live video feed β€”
of him, sitting right there at the desk.

β€œThank you for accepting the invitation,”
the man in the video said with a twisted smile.

Then, on screen, his reflection reached out and handed him an envelope β€”
and with a dull thud, an actual envelope dropped onto his desk from nowhere.

Trembling, he opened it.
Inside was a single gray card that read:

You have been automatically enrolled in STAKE’s Eternal Reward Program.

Outside, the fog grew thicker, swallowing even the light from the streetlamps.
His monitor flashed one last notification:

From: STAKE SYSTEM
Subject: πŸ•› November Early Reward Has Been Issued β€” Please Check 🎁

And below it, in tiny letters:

β€œThis reward will be automatically deducted in the form of your soul.
Thank you for participating.”

The doorbell rang.

He went to open it β€”
no one was there.

Only his phone lit up in the darkness,
as a new email appeared slowly on the screen.Β STAKE: King199666
Β 

Posted
On 10/27/2025 at 6:37 AM, Jake7589 said:

Halloween-Email Header (Forum).png

πŸ“šΒ Tell us your spooky storyΒ πŸ‘»

Ends: 7/11/2025 @Β  1.00 AM GMT

Write an original Halloween-themed story that captures the spirit of the season πŸ‘»
It can be scary, mysterious, or just a little strange; your creativity is what counts. 🎨
Drop your stories below πŸ’¬

Requirements:Β 

  • Reply to this thread with your stories.
  • Include your Stake ID.
  • To have a valid entry, fill out the below form, providing your detailsΒ 

HERE

Prize Pool: $1,000

  • Distributed to 20 randomly selected winners who meet the above conditions.

How to Enter:

  • Reply with your Stories
  • Include your Stake ID

Prize pool distribution:

  • Complete the challenge within the next 7Β days for a shot at the prize pool.
  • Winners are limited to 20.
  • IMPORTANT: Don’t miss out!Β Stay tuned for the official winner announcements so you can grab your prize before the link expires. Users will not be credited after the 3 month time period ends.

Stake.com users only β€Ό

Terms of Service – Competition:Β 

For FullΒ Terms of Service - Expand below Quote

The Whispering Mirror

When Lily moved into her grandmother’s old house, everyone in town told her the same thing:
β€œDon’t look into the mirror at midnight.”

The mirror hung in the hallway, tall and cracked at the edges. Its frame was carved with strange facesβ€”some crying, some screaming. Lily laughed it off. Ghost stories were for children.

On Halloween night, after the last trick-or-treater had gone, Lily poured herself a glass of wine and stood in front of the mirror. The clock struck midnight.

She smirked.
β€œSee? Nothing.”

Then the lights flickered.

In the reflection, the hallway behind her stretchedβ€”longer and longer, fading into darkness. And in that darkness, something moved. A shadow, crawling closer.

Lily spun around. Nothing there. But when she turned back, her reflection was smilingβ€”though she wasn’t.

β€œLet me out,” it whispered, lips moving soundlessly at first, then louder, until the words scraped against the walls.

The glass rippled. A pale hand pressed from the other side, pushing, cracking the surface.

The next morning, the mirror stood whole again. But the reflection wasn’t Lily anymore.

It was smiling.

Posted

One Halloween Night in 2024 me and my buddy Austin went for a cruise down a old dirtΒ  road in the woods on my truck and we were driving up hill until we heard screaming in the woods someone screaming help me! It sounded like the person was in pain or something bad was happening to them. It was a grown man screaming for their life so. I stop the truck and shut the truck off and told my buddy we have to do something. He called me crazy and told me we should call the cops and that's what we were gonna do until both of our phones lost servers. After we both got off the car and to try get service from one of out phones and next thing you know I see my buddy running for his life screaming bro there's something behind you and then I looked behind me and it was a tall figure all black with red eyes screaming get out of road it said and when we ran back to the truck it passed us with horse feet with a human body. I started the truck and drove all the way home from another road and didn't look back once I was off that dirt road. My grandmother said it was the devil. I belive her from what me and Austin saw.Β 

Id: Shadowdadog

Posted

Stake username: Kakis67

Every year, the town of Hollow Creek held a contest for the scariest pumpkin. But this year, no one could beat Lucas β€” his pumpkin looked… too real. Its eyes didn’t just glow with candlelight; they seemed to reflect the gaze of anyone who looked into them.

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Everyone laughed at first, until the pumpkin’s expression began to change. The cheerful carved smile twisted into a mocking grin. Some kids swore they saw it blink.

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The next morning, Lucas was gone. On his porch sat the same pumpkin β€” but now its carved eyes had taken on the color of his own.

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No one carved pumpkins in Hollow Creek after that. Yet every Halloween, one still appears on its own β€” glowing, smiling, as if to whisper: β€œYour turn.”

Posted

The last thing I saw was my alarm clock flashing 12:07 AM before she pushed her long rotting nails through my blankets, her other hand holding up my phone. The screen was lit up, showing a photo she had just taken.

It was a picture of me sleeping.
ID Bustake123

Posted (edited)

Β Title: Stake Street Pumpkin
On Halloween 2025, Stake Street glowed like a glitching slot machine. Every door flashed the Stake logo. Kids whispered, β€œBet ID or bust.”
At #666 stood a black matte pumpkin, eyes cut like Mines diamonds, mouth a Dragon Tower grid, teeth fleeing chickens. It didn’t glowβ€”it breatled. Smoke spun spiderwebs in the air.
Drakeβ€”skeletal in black leatherβ€”faced it.
β€œOne game,” the pumpkin hissed. β€œChicken. Win: x666 multiplier. Lose: your soul stays in the grid.”
He smirked, devilish, and touched it. A 5x5 Mines board appeared. One bomb. Click 24 safe tiles.
Click. Click. Click.
Each safe tile erased a memory. At #24, the bomb blinked. Cashout at x100… or go all-in.
He clicked.
BOOM.
The pumpkin cackledβ€”a mechanical hen.
β€œYou lost… but you hacked the house.”
It cracked open. Inside: a golden ticketβ€”Bet ID 666,000,666,666 – Eternal Win.
Drake took it. The street reset. Logos faded to normal pumpkins. Kids shouted β€œtrick or treat!” again.
Only the man in black remained, grinning, ticket in handβ€”never to burn.
Bet ID: 666,000,666,666
Stake Username: DrakeThePumpkinKing
Every year at midnight, the pumpkin returns… for the next brave click. πŸŽƒ

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Stake iD : Tituspullo1

Edited by Tituspullo1
Posted

Stake ID :Β  Piomio

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It was already late when I finally set off along the forest path. The fog hung low, and each of my steps sounded far too loud on the damp leaves. My cell phone had lost signal, but the beam of my flashlight was just enough to see the path.

Then I heard it.

A second stepβ€”not mine.

I stopped. The sound faded away, too. My heart pounded in my chest as I slowly turned around. Nothing. Just fog.

I continued walking, this time faster. Again: footsteps.

This time very close behind me. "Who's there?!" I called into the darkness. No answerβ€”only a soft whisper, right next to my ear:

"You haven't been alone in a long time..." I turned around, the light flickeredβ€”and at the last moment before it went out, I saw my own face emerging from the fog toward me.

Posted

It was my first Halloween ever bucouse im from algeria and we dont do Halloween in algeria , and I was so excited to see Β this event Β in canada ,I loved dessing up as a vampireπŸ§›πŸ§› decorations, and costumes.As I walked through the crowd, I accidentally bumped into a girl dressed as a witch, and her glasses fell to the ground.I helped her pick them up, we smiled at each other, and couldn’t stop laughing at the funny coincidence.We talked all night, sharing candies and stories, as if we had known each other for years.That made my first Halloween an unforgettable night, full of laughter, a beautiful coincidence, and the spark of a possible romance.❀️πŸ”₯πŸ§› i loved Β tjis event and i hope do it again

Stake id :Nasrop

Posted (edited)

The year was 2022, while finishing Halloween decorations at my backyard, went inside my house to my bedroom to play some playstation, after awhile of gaming, it was past midnight noticed loud noises of footsteps , shaking bushes , peeped out from window to find pumpkins rolling around the backyard, rushed to call my parents and we went to the back yard to find the pumpkins were being stolen by monkeys ?????? sure scared the hell out of me and my family

Id: Need5k

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Edited by Need5k
Posted (edited)

πŸš‚ β€œThe Red Signal”

The forest around Vandhara Loop was the kind that swallowed sound. Even the crickets were silent there.

It was 1:30 a.m. when the freight train stopped β€” an abrupt, metallic sigh in the middle of nowhere.

The signal ahead glowed red, the color slicing through fog like a wound.

Raghavan, the senior driver, rubbed his eyes and checked the watch. β€œStrange,” he muttered. β€œThis track hasn’t had a night signal in years.”

Beside him, the younger driver, Deepak, looked out the window. The trees leaned close, wet with mist. β€œMaybe it’s a fault,” he said.

Raghavan grunted, leaning back. β€œYou watch the light. I’ll rest for a bit. Wake me when it turns green.”

Deepak nodded. He adjusted the throttle, his eyes fixed on the unmoving signal ahead. The rhythmic tick of the engine was the only sound.

Then β€” a tap on the glass.

He turned.

An old woman stood outside the driver’s cabin, her white hair plastered to her face by the rain. Her eyes, black and bottomless, stared straight at him.

Deepak’s stomach twisted. The nearest village was 20 kilometers away. No roads. No lights.

β€œAmmā…” he stammered, sliding the window open a crack. β€œWhat are you doing here at this hour?”

Her voice came soft, trembling.

β€œI live here… alone. Please, son, some food… I haven’t eaten in days.”

Something about her tone cracked his fear β€” she sounded human. He reached for his tiffin box, lifting it toward her outstretched hands.

Then, a rough grip seized his wrist.

Raghavan β€” now wide awake β€” yanked his hand back. His voice was sharp, trembling.

β€œAre you mad? Think, boy! This window is ten feet above the ground. How is she at eye level?”

Deepak froze.

The woman’s face twisted β€” lips stretching, eyes widening, as if the skin itself was remembering how to scream. Her voice deepened, echoing in the cabin like wind through a tunnel.

β€œHungry… still hungry…”

The two men slammed the window shut. The train shuddered as if struck. The red signal ahead began to flicker β€” red, then black, then red again.

Then the forest went silent. Completely.

When dawn came, the freight train was found still standing at the same signal. The controls were untouched.

But both drivers sat upright in their seats β€” eyes open, mouths frozen mid-breath β€” like statues carved from fear itself.

And the signal light?

It was green.

Only, no one remembers setting it that way.

The end: They were killed brutally , their brains had eaten and their stomachs were pierced and their eyes were buckled out . Who did this ? It was a devil named *kanmani*.  ButWhy ? Because they haven't made their deposit in stake from the last 3 months.😁

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Stake id : Bhuvana12

Edited by Imkiran63
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