The scariest part about this is that we don’t even know what the affected portion is. Is it an infection? Is is the effect of a chemical? Is it just something else?
This was really good. I love how it made me expect a jumpscare but it never happened (which is good because jumpscares are so cheap nowadays). Please do more videos like this, I can't get enough of analog horror.
Really creepy, the first analog horror video that actually made me feel uncomfortable in the sense of "what's next?". Luckily you didn't use cheap methods such as jumpscares and left instead room for our imaginations. Subscribed! <3
this seems like an actual product companies would sell for personal home usage in a situation like that. its like the corona mask but replace it with a home amputator
It was cool, but throughout the vid fact that illego corp would waste a lot of money on cassetes bothered me too much. If they just going to show text and images they would just include paper manual, live demonstration could easily be skipped. On a second thought it would make sence to record a cassette with narration.
Damn, this is legitimately really good! I love the subtlety and how it keeps you guessing what the device is for until the payoff. I’m curious as to what setting this takes place in. Is it a disease epidemic in which the only hope for survival is looping off the infected part? A zombie apocalypse maybe? I’d love to see more of this stuff.
Loved this. Kept expecting a jump scare or for the video to cut to some weird found footage but instead it was just a "legitimate" cassette for a surprisingly disturbing product. The use of subtlety is a nice breath of fresh air in the horror genre right now. Too many horror creators think that horror is at it's best when it's throwing monsters and jump scares at you left and right. They couldn't be more wrong though. Horror is at it's best when it uses subtlety. When it lets your imagination run wild with fear and anticipation. In fact, it's often the things that let that anticipation build up through use of subtle horror that sticks with us the longest because our minds desperately want closure and so we will continue to imagine and wonder about the truth of the horror we see. It creates a feeling of unease, and that is where horror is at it's best. That's when it gets under your skin. Jump scares and monsters may give us a shock and some fear in the moment, but, as quickly as the scene happens, the fear is over just as fast. But when a film creates an unsettling feeling without ever showing a monster or jump scare, it lasts much longer.
The scariest part about this is that we don’t even know what the affected portion is. Is it an infection? Is is the effect of a chemical? Is it just something else?
With the analog horror scene getting worse of late, it's nice to see a diamond in the rough. Great job.
Now, this...THIS, is how you do horror. The buildup, the anticipation, the reveal of what this thing does, it's all so masterfully done.
This was really good. I love how it made me expect a jumpscare but it never happened (which is good because jumpscares are so cheap nowadays). Please do more videos like this, I can't get enough of analog horror.
Really creepy, the first analog horror video that actually made me feel uncomfortable in the sense of "what's next?". Luckily you didn't use cheap methods such as jumpscares and left instead room for our imaginations. Subscribed! <3
this seems like an actual product companies would sell for personal home usage in a situation like that. its like the corona mask but replace it with a home amputator
It was cool, but throughout the vid fact that illego corp would waste a lot of money on cassetes bothered me too much. If they just going to show text and images they would just include paper manual, live demonstration could easily be skipped. On a second thought it would make sence to record a cassette with narration.
This series looks seriously promising. Shame that we only got one episode so far
I just use my Scalpere 2000 as a vegetable slicer, sooo…
In a rare case of reverse spelling error, they used the word 'lose' to describe something that is 'loose'. You never really see that in writing.
Am I the only one who found this funny right off the bat?
Dude.
Instructions unclear, foreskin caught in gear wheels, pls send help...
underrated as fuck
Damn, this is legitimately really good! I love the subtlety and how it keeps you guessing what the device is for until the payoff. I’m curious as to what setting this takes place in. Is it a disease epidemic in which the only hope for survival is looping off the infected part? A zombie apocalypse maybe? I’d love to see more of this stuff.
SECTION 4
This person made a banger of an analog horror, then dipped.
Loved this. Kept expecting a jump scare or for the video to cut to some weird found footage but instead it was just a "legitimate" cassette for a surprisingly disturbing product. The use of subtlety is a nice breath of fresh air in the horror genre right now. Too many horror creators think that horror is at it's best when it's throwing monsters and jump scares at you left and right. They couldn't be more wrong though. Horror is at it's best when it uses subtlety. When it lets your imagination run wild with fear and anticipation. In fact, it's often the things that let that anticipation build up through use of subtle horror that sticks with us the longest because our minds desperately want closure and so we will continue to imagine and wonder about the truth of the horror we see. It creates a feeling of unease, and that is where horror is at it's best. That's when it gets under your skin. Jump scares and monsters may give us a shock and some fear in the moment, but, as quickly as the scene happens, the fear is over just as fast. But when a film creates an unsettling feeling without ever showing a monster or jump scare, it lasts much longer.
Does anyone else listen to this for just the music? This shit fuckin jams in 2023
Dude the music is a banger