29/31 Year Zero. Told through different perspectives across the world, a worldwide zombie apocalypse highlights the different priorities that drive humanity.

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25/31 Plunge. A ship that sank 40 years years ago while researching rare wildlife leads a salvage crew to an island and a mystery that continues to defy explanation. Bonus points: weird sea creatures and undead sailors. , Stuart Immonen,

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23/31 Friendo. Malevolent marketing VR, robot paparazzi, and money-hungry investors contribute to a desperate man’s downward spiral. Certainly not a comforting read, but it feels like a necessary one. , , ,

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18/31 Lonely Receiver. A woman creates ideal life partner in a world where smartphones have become people but struggles to understand that what she built does not belong to her. Posthumanist & genuinely creepy. , ,

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16/31 Last Stop on the Red Line. “I’m not sure which is scarier...when you see the monster or when you don’t.” When it comes to the dark thing in the subway violently murdering commuters...I’m going with both , , , Adam Pruett

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15/31 The Low, Low Woods. Two friends go to watch a movie and can’t remember anything, revealing a disturbing link to their perpetually burning mining town’s past. , Dani,

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10/31 The Groom. A webcomic where two girls craft a pipe cleaner doll to complete a diorama they discovered, but when it appears to come to life things turn dark. Think Toy Story 4 but if Forky had a serious mean streak https://t.co/gqg81XwI7a

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7/31 The Grievling. Town outcast Lily honors the dead every Halloween, and they choose to repay her after a horrible accident. Her gift from beyond the grave may make her a superhero—or a monster.

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5/31 Disaster Inc. A samurai ghost haunting an irradiated exclusion zone goes after ‘extreme’ adrenaline-seeking tourists. Joe Harris, ,

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31/31 The Empty Man. Pandemic causes infected to act out in violent and strange ways. And the first symptom is seeing the Empty Man. By

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22/31 Snow, Glass, Apples. A dark twist on Snow White told from the witch’s perspective that makes the princess a vampire. By

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19/31 John Carpenter’s Tales of Science Fiction: Vortex. Asteroid miners encounter trouble prompting a rescue team to intervene and mayhem ensue. Great mix of Gothic and body horror. By

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18/31 (forgot to post yesterday!) Vampire State Building. An ancient cannibal god awakens in the Empire State Building with hundreds trapped inside. By , Ange and Patrick Renault,

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10/31 John Carpenter's Tales of Science Fiction: Twitch. A series of violent murders from previously benign citizens can be traced back to an alien signal. By

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5/31 Eternal. A dystopian world caused by human cloning and consciousness transfer makes non-genetically modified beings (“Pures”) a rarity. By

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4/31 Freaks of the Heartland. A devoted older brother cares for his unusual brother, whose physical deformities come with an immense psychic power. Forced to flee their home, they stumble upon a dark town secret. By and

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3/31 Demonic. Potential demonic possession? Creepy masks? A wayward detective? Childhood spent in a weird cult? Come for the tropes, stay for the unique take on “selling” your soul. By

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2/31 Aliens: Dead Orbit. If you’re a fan of the game you’ll love the similarities with this one. Definitely wins for goriest Chestburster scene of all time. By .

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18/31 Dead Life. A boy steals an artifact from this grandfather—and begins a zombie apocalypse. Bonus points for zombie birds Jean-Charles Gaudin and

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6/31 Abbott. Black female journalist faces racism, misogany, and dark occult forces in 70s Detroit

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