The Lore

🦋 Mothman

First spotted by gravediggers in Clendenin, West Virginia in
1966, Mothman was described as a dark, winged figure with glowing red eyes and
a 10-foot wingspan. Later sightings near Point Pleasant included car chases,
roadside encounters, and a growing sense of dread. Many believe the creature
was an omen — especially after the tragic collapse of the Silver Bridge in
1967. The story took flight with The Mothman Prophecies and hasn’t
landed since. Today, the legend has a dedicated museum, a statue, and an annual
festival. West Virginia’s most famous cryptid has officially gone mainstream.

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🧌 Bigfoot

Massive footprints. Eerie howls. A blurry figure
disappearing into the trees. Bigfoot sightings stretch back generations,
especially in the Pacific Northwest. Often described as a large, hairy
humanoid, Bigfoot walks the line between myth and maybe — with thousands of
reported encounters and zero verified selfies. Whether he's a reclusive forest
giant or a really committed prankster, Bigfoot remains the undisputed
heavyweight champion of North American cryptids.

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🐐 Chupacabra

The Chupacabra — Spanish for “goat sucker” — is blamed for
livestock deaths across Puerto Rico, Mexico, and the American Southwest.
Witnesses describe it as scaly, spined, and definitely not housebroken. First
reported in the 1990s, this vampire-like cryptid became a modern monster almost
overnight. Some say it’s a mutated coyote. Others say it’s extraterrestrial.
Whatever it is, you don’t want it in your barn.

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🌊 Loch Ness
Monster (Nessie)

Since the 1930s, visitors to Scotland’s Loch Ness have sworn
they’ve seen something moving beneath the water — long, dark, and bigger than
any fish has business being. Nessie is the queen of lake monsters, with
centuries of folklore and a few grainy photos to her name. Some say she’s a
surviving plesiosaur. Others say she’s just shy. Either way, Nessie remains one
of the most beloved cryptids in the world.

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🦇 Jersey Devil

Screams in the night. Wings in the dark. Hooves on the
forest floor. The Jersey Devil has haunted New Jersey’s Pine Barrens since the
1700s. Legend says it was the cursed 13th child of a colonial woman — born
monstrous and fled into the woods. Since then, it’s been blamed for livestock
attacks, strange footprints, and a full-blown panic in 1909. Whether myth,
mutant, or something else entirely, the Devil’s in the details.

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»




🦴 Wendigo

Born of starvation, isolation, and something darker, the
Wendigo is a creature of endless hunger and ancient forest curses. Rooted in
Indigenous folklore from the Algonquian-speaking peoples, it was said to be a
human who gave in to cannibalism — and was twisted into a gaunt, spirit-haunted
predator that can never be full again.