10 Creepy Urban Legends From Around The World

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Some of the key takeaways from the passage are that urban legends are stories that may have started based on truth but have been retold over time, and it provides summaries of 10 different urban legends from locations around the world.

The urban legend about the Watcher in New Jersey is about a family that received strange letters from someone calling themselves 'The Watcher' after moving into a new home, claiming to have been watching the house for decades and getting increasingly specific about the family members.

The Skin-Walker legend from Native American mythology is about a type of witch that can transform into any animal and uses this to trick and attack people while disguised.

10 Creepy Urban Legends From Around The World

Every place on earth is host to some form of urban legend, but, rest assured that there's
never any truth to any of them... right?

There are tourist destinations around the world that people love to visit. There are
museums, historical sites, and even supposedly haunted locations that people like to
make it a point to stop at when they're on vacation.

Just like there are tourist destinations around the world, there are also a lot of urban
legends that are typically connected to a certain place. An urban legend is a story that's
been told over and over and may or may not have started out with some truth. Whether
they're real or not, these stories are still spooky and fun to hear about. To see 10 spooky
urban legends from around the globe, keep reading!

10New Jersey: The Watcher

Shortly after the Broaddus family moved into their new home in Westfield, New Jersey,
things got strange pretty quickly. Moving into a new home should be a happy time, but,
according to this urban legend, it was anything but happy for the Broaddus family.

Only a few days after moving in, they received a letter from someone who introduced
themselves as The Watcher. This person claimed that his family had been "watching"
the house for decades. To make things eerier, the letters didn't stop and started getting
specific about the family's nicknames and hobbies.

9Japan: Kuchisake-Onna

Kuchisake-onna is the name of a ghost that appears in many versions of an urban legend
in Japan. Kuchisake-onna is also known as "the slit-mouthed woman" because of her
looks.

According to the stories, Kuchisake-onna can be seen wandering around and is always


wearing a surgical mask. She will approach anyone who walks near her and ask them if
she's pretty. If the person says "yes," she'll remove her mask to reveal the cuts on the
corners of her mouth and ask again. Say "yes" again or she's said to cut your mouth to
match hers! Yikes!

8Florida: Robert The Doll

Robert the Doll is a doll that is on display at a museum in Florida and was originally
given to a young boy named Robert Eugene Otto, the son of a wealthy family in Key
West, back in 1904. It was given to him after his grandfather picked it up in Germany on
vacation.
This doll has gained quite a reputation for being haunted. People claim that anyone who
visits and disrespects the doll will be met with misfortune and stories of the doll moving
or making a different facial expression or having things go missing in its presence have
surrounded this doll for decades.

7Arizona: Skin-Walkers

A Skin-Walker is the subject of many Native American myths and legends. This creature
comes from Navajo legends and is said to be a malicious type of witch that has the
ability to transform itself into any type of animal that it wants to be. Once disguised as
an animal, the Skin-Walker uses this to trick people so that it can attack them.

Like other stories from the Navajo people, the exact details about Skin-Walkers is
something that many Navajo people are reluctant to share with non-Navajo people
because the story is so close to their culture. But what people do know is that this legend
is terrifying.

6New Zealand: Auckland Domain Witches

In Auckland, New Zealand, there's a large park known as Auckland Domain. This park is
the oldest one in the area and has quite a bit of history. This park is a fun place to go for
a walk, but it can be pretty spooky after dark thanks to an urban legend that surrounds
the park.

According to legend, three witches were hanged int his park in the 19th century. Now,
people claim that if you walk through Auckland Domain during the night, you'll hear the
eerie cackle of one of the witches that had her final moments in the park.

5Texas: Black-Eyed Children

The myth of the Black-Eyed Children is a story that has been around since some time in
the 1980s. The legends of these mysterious and totally terrifying creatures became
particularly famous in the mid-1990s after a reporter in Texas wrote an article detailing
his supposed experience with these creatures.

Stories about Black-Eyed Children are now told all over the place and have a lot of
variations, but typically involve one of these mysterious kids coming to a door or
window and asking to be let into your house.

4Mexico: La Llorona

No, La Llorona isn't just the subject of a horror movie. In fact, that movie was based on
an actual urban legend from Mexico. The story of La Llorona is one of the best-known
spooky stories that has come from Mexico - and for good reason, this story is terrifying!

According to stories, La Llorona was a woman who was left by her husband. In her grief,
she drowned her children and herself, and she now spends her time as a ghost
wandering around, crying, and looking for her children. The legend states that anyone
who comes near her will meet the same fate as her children. Other versions of the story
claim she actually kidnaps other kids!

3Vietnam: Tree Ghosts

Vietnam is a country in Southeast Asia that has a rich culture, a long history, and quite a
few creepy urban legends. One urban legend involves the lush greenery in the country.

According to this urban legend, the many ghosts that wander around Vietnam are
desperately searching for somewhere to live. These ghosts will often make their way to
the Vietnamese countryside where they'll take up life in one of the many trees in the
forests of Vietnam. People who cut down or harm these trees without asking the ghost to
leave first are said to be cursed with bad luck for the rest of their lives.

2Oregon: Polybius

Polybius is the name of a fictional video game from an urban legend that has been going
around the Internet for quite some time. This urban legend is set back in the 1980s and
surrounds a supposed video game that was in arcades in Portland, Oregon.

According to these legends, Polybius was a video game in arcades in Portland in the
1980s that was developed by the government and had strange psychological effects on
anyone who played it. Mysterious men in black suits would appear periodically to
retrieve data from the game to analyze its players.

1Nevada: Area 51

Area 51 is a highly classified area in the Nevada desert that is part of Edwards Air Force
Base. Because Area 51, also known by other names like Homey Airport and Groom Lake,
is so highly classified that it's impossible to say what the real purpose of Area 51
actually is. Many people believe that this location is simply used to develop and test
aircraft, but others think it has a more mysterious purpose.

According to myths and legends surrounding Area 51, this location is used for studying
alien technology and aliens themselves, such as the ones that were supposedly
discovered in Roswell, New Mexico.

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