[6][7][8] Its sporadically-uploaded episodes, which average nearly an hour in length, feature first-person narrations (often by Narnia himself) and are notable for their highly minimalist production, especially in their use of sound effects and music.
[10] The show took an extended hiatus starting in February 2012, causing some of Narnia's fellow podcasters to theorize it had been canceled due to a lack of updates.
[11] The podcast's cover art is a detail of a demon from the third section of Hieronymus Bosch's medieval triptych The Garden of Earthly Delights.
In the description of the episode "A Quick Trilogy of Terror", Narnia featured a short, humorous story written by 11-year-old fan Ethien Duckett explaining the fictional origins of the creature, dubbing it the "Ratbat".
Occasionally, titles will include uppercase letters or feature more than one word, signaling the appearance of more than one narrator and increased music and sound effects.
Watching that revealed to me at age 10, when it came on TV one night, that if you want a horror story to be truly frightening, you have to make it seem like you believe it all happened, presenting it with total sincerity and rationality."
[3] Emma Fradd from the Australian Dance Pop Band Heaps Good Friends has also provided music for some episodes, as well as voice acting in the short story 'Is It That Time Again?'
A cult's act of human sacrifice and resurrection reaches across the twentieth century to leave its imprint on a modern day murder.
An invitation to a séance leads a Congressman to face the wrath of a tortured spirit bent on making him suffer for a past betrayal.
Few considered the strange substance which spread through a small city to be anything more than a nuisance until the truth brought bloody horror to the entire world.
On a dark winter's night, a seeker of ghosts attuned to the strange energy within a remote haunted house underestimates its inhabitants' power to destroy.
In a previous episode, 'house', the psychic researcher Aramis Churchton makes reference to the notes his colleague Savid Doud has made concerning cases for potential investigation.
In a previous episode, 'house', the psychic researcher Aramis Churchton makes reference to the notes his colleague Savid Doud has made concerning cases for potential investigation.
In a mysterious, undefined era, a desperate foot journey traverses a winter wilderness that promises a lonely death--perhaps a natural one, but likely not.
These 10 stories were produced as videos for YouTube over the past year as a slight change of pace--here they are, if you haven't heard them yet, in audio-only format as a convenience to those (like me, actually) who prefer to do without the creaky visuals.
The featured story of this brief trilogy imagines that perhaps, Earth's final confrontation between good and evil will take place so quietly you'll be able to hear a caterpillar crawl through the blood-soaked grass.
Conflicting feelings about a banished relative lead to a visit a long time in coming … but each step toward her house reveals more warning signs.
A filmmaker recalls the details of his darkest project: the people who endured it, the illusions he lost to it, and the horrific force that set it all in motion.
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The Thing from the Hallway, directed by Tony J. Rivas and starring Mike Bash and Hilary Barraford, was released in March 2018 and later won a Silver Spotlight award.
"[7] Vox's Aja Romano made similar observations three years later, writing: "For sheer chills-around-the-campfire-style storytelling, nothing beats Knifepoint [...] its effectiveness derives partly from its minimalism, and the way creator Soren Narnia allows the silence to fill your mind with terror.