Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

People Share Their Favorite Urban Legends

People Share Their Favorite Urban Legends

As if dragons aren't scary enough––or cool enough, take your pick––there are all sorts of creepy tales from around the world about all the creepy creatures out there just waiting to get their claws into some poor, hapless traveler.

No, this isn't the stuff of SyFy Channel fame––we're talking about folklore, and it's fascinating!

After Redditor Minnesota Connections asked the online community, "What's your favorite "creature" from myths and urban legends and why?" people proved only too eager to weigh in. It turns out people love this stuff (and they enjoy passing it on even more).


"Back in the 70s..."

This one is pretty local to Loveland, OH, but I really like the Loveland Frog. Back in the 70s there were a few sightings of a weird "humanoid frog" that would scurry around on its hind legs. Eventually it was shot by police, who discovered that it was a large pet iguana with the tail cut off. Local newspapers played up the story big time.

Independent-Cicada

"Out of the darkness..."

Goatman. The idea that you don't know it was there until after it's gone is super freaky. I remember reading a story once about a group that went camping out in the desert somewhere, all sat round a fire at night. Out of the darkness a man with a goats head walks up to the fire and sits amongst them. They all carry on like it's not there but are all somehow aware it's there but some kind of calms comes over them all. After a while the Goatman stands up and puts his hand on the shoulder of the man next to him who also then stands up. They walk away together into the darkness and no one says anything and remains calm like nothing is wrong. Over the next hour they slowly come to there senses that this wasn't normal and some creature has taken there friend away into the night.

reverand_slingshot

"I just love the idea..."

Giphy

Leviathan/Kraken. I just love the idea of giant sea monsters for some reason. Whenever I'm playing a video game and there are giant sea monsters, I get so giddy.

Dao_Jarlen

"From Japanese folklore..."

From Japanese folklore the Ashiarai Yashiki its a giant foot that crashes through peoples houses and demands to be washed.

Nighthawk_Black_

"It's basically..."

The manananggal from Philippine mythology. Really unique.

It's basically a girl that turns into a vampire at night and eats unborn children. It detaches its torso and flies around at night, and it hates garlic and holy items.

d_j_5

"It's a win-win..."

A Japanese monster which forces you to give it a piggyback ride, then either crushes you under its weight or makes you rich if you make it to your destination. It's a win-win in my eyes.

KuiperDyne

"It's said..."

Skinwalker: Native American abominations. Can shape shift into animals, paralyze people with their gaze, incredibly strong and fast and have magic. It's said they're so powerful even mentioning them can draw them near.

Seriously how the hell is this not a movie yet.

reddituser0804

"There's an old version..."

I kinda like all the deadly women yokai in Japan.

Yuki-onna, a ghost woman who might cause you to freeze to death. Futakuchi-onna, a woman with a mouth in the back of her head that'll eat you out of house and home. But my favorite might be kuchisake-onna, the slit mouthed woman.

There's an old version and an updated new version. In the old version she holds a fan over her face, and in the new she wears a surgical mask like many people actually do in Japan. So late at night you're walking through the streets and you come across a young lady crying. You approach to ask her what's wrong and she turns, the lower half of her face covered. She says she's just been dumped and asks you if you think she's pretty. If you say no, she'll kill you, if you say yes she'll remove her mask and reveal her sliced open cheek and enormous sharp teeth. Then she'll ask you again if you think she's pretty. Say no, she kills you. Say yes, she cuts your cheek to match her own.

Stormhenge

"They're water spirits..."

The Kelpies of Scotland are my all-time favorite. They're water spirits that take the form of horses. They seem peaceful at first and will lure the victim onto their back, and then the victim's hands stick to it! Once the victim(s) are stuck, the Kelpie drags them into the body of water nearby, drowns them, and then eats them, leaving the entrails behind. Some myths say that if you bring your own bridle and capture a Kelpie, it can be turned tame and used as a work horse. They can also turn into humans! and can be either malevolent or benevolent. Mostly malevolent.

anadacragamakala

"I remember..."

Not necessarily my favourite but dragons/ great serpents (wyrms and wyvens mostly) are pretty common in folklore around here in the NE of England with stories such as the Lambton worm, Sockburn worm and the Laidly worm.

I remember my parents and teachers telling me the stories and they have stayed with me throughout my life, although I have not heard mention of them in years, I wonder if kids are still taught them. In general the UK has a ton of folklaw that is often overlooked for the likes of Bigfoot and the fay folk.

Doublebow

More from Trending/best-of-reddit

Kyra Sedgwick and Kevin Bacon on accoustic guitar
@kevinbacon/TikTok

Kevin Bacon And Kyra Sedgwick Hilariously Admit Secrets To Each Other In Viral 'We Don't Judge' Video

Successful communication between spouses is when one listens first while the other shares a revelation.

Actors Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick, who've been married since 1988, demonstrated they had this in the bag while participating in the viral TikTok challenge, "We listen and we don't judge."

Keep ReadingShow less
Blue Ivy Carter
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/GettyImages

Fans Defend Blue Ivy After People Call Her Dress At 'Mufasa' Premiere 'Wildly Inappropriate'

Beyoncé and Jay-Z's 12-year-old daughter Blue Ivy drew backlash at the Mufasa premiere because she was attired in a "wildly inappropriate" dress for a pre-teen. But, fans quickly came to the young actor's defense.

In Mufasa, the sequel and prequel to the live-action 2019 remake of The Lion King, Ivy voiced Kiara, the granddaughter of Mufasa and daughter of Simba and Nala.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kyrsten Sinema; Joe Manchin
Mandel Ngan-Pool/Getty Images; Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Kyrsten Sinema And Joe Manchin Give Dems And Labor Unions The Middle Finger With Vote

Outgoing Independent senators Kyrsten Sinema (Arizona) and Joe Manchin (West Virginia) gave Democrats and labor unions the middle finger by siding with Republicans to oppose confirming President Joe Biden's renomination of Lauren McFerran for the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which will let President-elect Donald Trump seize control of the board next year.

NLRB is the federal agency responsible for safeguarding employees’ workplace rights. Sinema and Manchin's decisive “no” votes doomed the nomination, as all Senate Republicans also opposed it. Only one of their votes was needed to secure McFerran’s confirmation.

Keep ReadingShow less
Vivek Ramaswamy
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Vivek Dragged After Claiming Federal Worker Told Him She'd Be Fine Being Fired

Billionaire Vivek Ramaswamy—fresh off being named the co-head of the new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)—was dragged after claiming on X that a federal worker came up to him praising DOGE and told him she'd be "OK" with being fired.

Ramaswamy claimed:

Keep ReadingShow less
United States of America flag in window behind wooden pane
Max Sulik on Unsplash

Culture Shocks Americans Faced Moving Home From Abroad

Culture shock is defined as "the feeling of disorientation experienced by someone who is suddenly subjected to an unfamiliar culture, way of life, or set of attitudes."

But what if the culture is the one you were born and raised in?

Keep ReadingShow less