True Hauntings
Real accounts of the unexplained. Police reports, witness testimony, the kind of story you pray isn't true. But it usually is.
AI-powered horror storytelling for YouTube and TikTok.
No face. No voice. Just the story.
Real accounts of the unexplained. Police reports, witness testimony, the kind of story you pray isn't true. But it usually is.
Found footage. Corrupted tapes. A signal that shouldn't exist. The horror that lives in static and bad reception.
The internet's own mythology. Slender Man. Backrooms. Sirens in the static. Stories built by collective imagination.
The story your friend's cousin swears happened to them. Except the details match too perfectly. Every time.
"The scariest thing isn't what you see. It's what you almost see — and then can't unsee."
Horror lives in atmosphere. In the pause before the sound. In the thing that moves in the corner of your eye.
Most horror content shows too much. We hold back. We let the viewer's imagination do the work — because their imagination is always scarier than anything we could render.
Nightveil exists to create horror that stays with you. Not a jump scare and done. A story you think about at 2am when you hear a sound that isn't quite a sound.
True crime reports, Reddit threads, folklore archives, listener submissions. Every story starts with something real — or real enough to feel true.
AI-generated visuals: fog-laden environments, obscured figures, light sources that don't behave. The world of the story rendered in dark, grainy, uncertain frames.
Consistent narrator voice — cold, measured, slightly detached. The voice that tells you something terrible happened, without ever seeming surprised by it.
YouTube Shorts and TikTok — short-form horror that hits before the viewer scrolls past. Every frame engineered to stop the thumb.
Nightveil. Faceless. Fearful. Running.