Sink into the shadows with chilling tales inspired by legends from across Asia—whispered warnings, haunted places, and restless spirits you’ll hear long after the video ends. Perfect for late-night listening and horror fans who love slow-burn dread, sudden scares, and eerie folklore.The Daughter of Hui Bi Hua, Plumeria on the Kapuas, The Yellow Ribbon Lady, The Sweet Girl of Ancol Bridge, Door to Hunger: The Maria Lobo Curse.
00:00 The Daughter of Hui Bi Hua
A first-person Asian horror set inside Saigon’s haunting Ho Chi Minh City Museum of Art. As night falls over Pho Duc Chinh Street in District 1, a lone photographer explores the former mansion of real-estate tycoon Hui Bi Hua. Echoes in empty corridors, a locked upstairs room, and a whispered legend about a hidden daughter turn a routine assignment into a chilling descent.
25:09 Plumeria on the Kapuas
Tonight’s tale drifts into the misty swamps where the Kapuas meets the Landak. In a stilt house framed by plumeria and moonlit water, a traveler settles in—only to learn why locals never leave laundry out at night. Inspired by Indonesian and Malaysian folklore, this slow-burn narrative builds dread through whispers on wooden walls, soft knocking in the dark, and a fragrance that turns from sweet to wrong.
0:47:19 The Yellow Ribbon Lady
When the yellow ribbons flutter, the night is already watching. In this Asian horror tale inspired by Myanmar folklore, a traveler lodges beside an old cemetery and learns why locals whisper about a midnight figure who carries a coffin through sleeping streets. Expect slow-burn tension, sensory detail, and the eerie hush of a village that bargains with the unseen—no jump-cut cheats, just dread that tightens with every footstep.
1:05:28 The Sweet Girl of Ancol Bridge
A sound recordist crosses Ancol’s pedestrian bridge after midnight to capture ambience—lamps humming, water breathing, wood creaking. Then jasmine drifts in against the wind, offerings glint beneath the rail, and bare footsteps begin to keep pace with his own.
1:21:23 Door to Hunger: The Maria Lobo Curse
A night nurse accepts a quiet hospice shift in a remote Filipino village. The house is old, the rice fields are silent, and a single pot simmers on the stove. As the hours creep by, whispers at the window and a polite knock on the door turn routine care into a test of mercy, folklore, and hunger. Inspired by the urban legend of Maria Lobo and the Aswang, this first-person tale builds slow dread into a breathless confrontation—without jump-scare gimmicks, just atmosphere, sound, and the horror of choice.
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