3 Dreadful True Horror Stories

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Published 2023-05-28

All Comments (21)
  • Someone please tell this man that he is the best best storyteller on the internet also the best overall scary videos and narration
  • @ronaldjr1312
    Story 2. He's a coward. You had the means to stop a slaughter.
  • @debi1451
    That Bear sounded psycho for an animal. It was like he was thinking of the best way to attack those Men , And the way he stared at them , gives me literal chills!.
  • @Nene_760
    Getting eaten alive in the cold has to be one of the worst ways to die
  • That dude in the second story is a coward. Yeah, it's not simple or easy for some to shoot another person, but it's better to take down the gunman rather than watch them go on a rampage killing innocent people and children.
  • @ruggi23
    Its crazy how scary a story can be even from an bear attack
  • @LuigiStar31
    Bro that second one is lame af. 13:00 This dude said "i knew i would be no different from him if i did" so you let 3 people die just because of that wack ass Reason? Batman type beat 💀
  • The third story is apparently the serial killer Alejandro Henriquez. He was active in the Bronx from 1986 to 1989 and he was caught in 1990. He sexually assaulted and then blugeoned to death with a hammer three teenage girls. He is suspected of raping and murdering three others but they aren't sure because there is very little evidence to prove it and there were no other reliable witnesses. He is only suspected but so far, only the three that he was convicted of is the reason why he is prison for life. Some people think that he may be responsible for more than just six and that he was active in New York City for more than just three years. But he never talks and still claims to be innocent, saying that he was framed for the murders by racist white cops because he is a Puerto Rican. So the "Hammer Man" story may be real if the story is actually about Alejandro Henriquez.
  • How could someone live with them self, knowing they could've saved 3 people's lives? One of them being a child.
  • @devilstar3476
    My father used to be a security officer at the Trolley Square mall. And my uncle Cesar used to work at the Rodizio grill restaurant. My dad happened to stop working here I think about a week or a month before the massacre because he had to move. We've been super lucky and blessed.
  • You need to post more often! You're my favorite horror narrator on YouTube.
  • I was talking to my boyfriend’s step brother and we started talking about a movie I saw about a bear attack. He told me to keep this in mind about bears: If it’s black, attack. If it’s brown, lay down. If it’s white, good night. Polar bears are no joke man.
  • The fact that the person in the shooter story, was a good person an didn't use it to save other's is a coward. Is now even more so a coward advocating how bad they are in the bad man's hands lmao awe man. Sorry if anyone gets butt hurt but what a straight coward lol aw man. Had to the chance to save lives right from the start. Sad time's when that story just doesn't make no damn sense. Other's stories thanks for the narrative master man. I'd shite myself facing a polar bear 🐻‍❄️. From what I read they can be very vicious in hunger hunt mode.
  • Story 2:, NO, if you would have shot him you wouldn’t have been anything like him. He’s a monster. You would be considered a hero, but instead, you were a COWARD. Guns in the hands of good guys do good things.
  • @dualhelmets
    I wonder if the dude in story 2 also gave up his car due to drunk drivers. And his kitchen knives due to stabbings.
  • @rpgspree
    Great narration as always, Nightmare. As for the 2nd story... There are so many people who have such a burning certainty that if they were in that situation, they be the hero. The writer thought so too... The truth is that if you haven't ever been in that situation before and never had any real training, you haven't any damn clue what you'd actually do in that moment. No matter how black and white you think the decision is, it's not so simple to shoot someone in cold blood...even with the best of intentions. You'd like to think you'd be the hero, that you could do it. Maybe you can, maybe not. As for the writer, the situation would have played out exactly the same if he hadn't been there. In a sense, he still wasn't there at all. In that moment, his senses left him. The conflict between doing the "right thing" to save lives and being a killer broke him psychologically. No amount of fantasization made up for his complete lack of training or experience. All he had were action movie dreams, a grandiose idealization of how that situation would play out. He found out that the stone cold reality was so vastly different that he couldn't even comprehend it before that moment. And neither do all of the armchair "heroes" who criticize him. A mental jam is much like a gun jam. If you have no idea how to clear, it effectively becomes useless. As for myself, I don't know what I'd do in that situation either. What I do know is what many others who have real experience said about it. What I think I'd do, what I'd want to do, what I'd need to do would be irrelevant. Without training, the reality is just not something I could truly understand nor should I be foolish enough to think otherwise. I know that people who didn't take the time to read, let alone understand, what I just said are going to comment. Well, don't bother. I won't reply. If you can't take the time to read it slowly at least THREE times and really get it, then replying isn't worth my time either.