Tag: horror

  • Haunted Barracks: Korea’s Military Ghost Stories

    Haunted Barracks: Korea’s Military Ghost Stories

    Every Korean base has a ghost story. From eerie guard posts to phantom radio calls, Korea’s military folklore is filled with soldiers who never stopped standing watch. We explore the legends, the psychology behind them, and the blurred line between stress and the supernatural.

    Media recommendations

    • R-Point
    • Dog Soldiers
    • Dead of Night (‘74)
    • The Living & the Dead (‘07)
    • The Others (kinda)

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    Credits

    Produced by Joe McPherson and Shawn Morrissey

    Music by Soraksan

    Top Tier Patrons

    Angel Earl
    Joel Bonomini
    Devon Hiphner
    Gabi Palomino
    Steve Marsh
    Eva Sikora
    Ron Chang
    Hunter Winter
    Cecilia Löfgren Dumas
    Ashley Wright
    Edward Bradford
    Boram Yoon
    Chad Struhs
    Stewart MacMillan
    Louise Dreisig

    The Ghosts That Still Stand Guard: Korea’s Military Hauntings

    The Korean military has two realities — the one soldiers live in, and the one they whisper about after dark. In those long night watches, the barracks fill with stories of footsteps on empty floors, radios that speak to no one, and figures in old uniforms walking where no one should be.

    The Perfect Conditions for a Haunting

    Isolation, sleep deprivation, and a rigid hierarchy make the military a breeding ground for ghost stories. Many tales come from soldiers on overnight guard duty or bases built over former battlefields. Psychologists say these stories help conscripts process fear together. In other words, ghost stories are group therapy in camouflage.

    Classic Motifs

    • Ghosts wearing outdated ROK uniforms
    • Radio messages from empty outposts
    • Sudden drops in temperature inside fences
    • People walking over water or through barbed wire
    • Voices crying where no civilians live

    Famous Hauntings

    Nonsan Training Center
    Recruits report seeing dead trainees calling them over during grenade drills. The “Ghost Tree” nearby has spooked generations of soldiers who swear they see faces in the bark.

    The White-Clad Old Man
    In 2014, soldiers at a construction site saw an old man dressed in white drifting between half-built barracks. Excavation later revealed old graves under the site. The figure vanished soon after — but guards still feel watched.

    The Combat Boot Ghost
    At an Air Force base, a suicide victim’s boot refused to burn. Soon, a one-booted soldier was seen patrolling the corridors. Footsteps echoed from empty floors until the dormitory was shut down.

    The Ammunition Depot Spirits
    Front-line guards heard invisible boots and ghostly rifle clinks near old Korean War ammo bunkers. One ghost, “Private Kim on the 2nd Step,” supposedly still walks his post.

    The Fog Ghost
    Along the DMZ, soldiers see a lone figure emerging from thick mist. Radios fail, the temperature drops, and the shape disappears into vapor — a soldier reliving his last patrol forever.

    What It Says About Military Life

    Korea’s military ghosts reveal more than superstition. They show the human cost of isolation, hierarchy, and fear. The haunted barracks are symbols of the stress young men endure — and the stories they invent to survive it.

    Whether it’s a ghost or just the mind trying to make sense of the dark, one truth remains: in the Korean military, even the dead still stand guard.

  • Creepy Summer Stories 2025

    Creepy Summer Stories 2025

    We kick off Spooky Summer with a handful of ghost stories and haunted tourist sites. Enjoy!

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    Join our Patreon to get more stuff

    https://patreon.com/darksideofseoul

    Book a tour of The Dark Side of Seoul Ghost Walk at https://darksideofseoul.com

    Credits

    Produced by Joe McPherson and Shawn Morrissey

    Music by Soraksan

    Top Tier Patrons

    Angel Earl
    Joel Bonomini
    Devon Hiphner
    Gabi Palomino
    Steve Marsh
    Eva Sikora
    Ron Chang
    Hunter Winter
    Cecilia Löfgren Dumas
    Ashley Wright
    Edward Bradford
    Boram Yoon
    Chad Struhs
    Stewart MacMillan
    Louise Dreisig

    Creepy Korean ghost stories

    Spooky Chilly Summer: Korean Ghost Stories to Give You Chills

    Introduction
    Summer in Korea can be scorching—but nothing cools you off faster than a good ghost story. In Part 7 of Spooky Chilly Summer, Shawn and Joe deliver three of the creepiest urban legends: a masked grandma who quizzes wandering kids, a forest chair that shows you your own funeral, and a subway rider who refuses to disappear. Plus, discover haunted tourist sites you can visit—if you dare.

    The Hong Kong Grandma’s Question

    • Summer 1992 in Mapo-gu: kids whisper of the Halmae Gwishin in a red mask
    • Ritual requires answering each question and ending with “Hong Kong”
    • Showing flat palms means death; Min-jun bends his fingers and earns mercy

    The Chair in the Forest

    • Dusk hike outside Seoul reveals a lone wooden chair in a clearing
    • Sit without offering a coin or flower, and you’ll glimpse your own funeral
    • Survivors swear leaving an offering spares them from that final vision

    The Subway Ghost

    • Last train out of Seoul, empty cars, a pale boy in an old school uniform
    • He asks for a ride home to an address you recognize—only to vanish on the platform
    • Next day you learn he died at that station years ago; some riders still see him

    Conclusion

    Whether it’s an alleyway Q&A with Halmae, a haunted seat in the woods, or a never-ending subway ride, Korea’s summer nights hide too many shadows. Pack a flashlight—and some coins—before you head out.

  • More Korean Spooky Tales

    More Korean Spooky Tales

    Huddle in your favorite blanket. Turn off the lights. We are bringing more campfire stories. Listen–if you dare!

    Check out our sponsor

    City of Ghosts

    City of Ghosts
    A supernatural neo-noir audio drama set in 1990s NYC about corruption, murder, and the things that haunt us.

    A supernatural neo-noir audio drama set in 1990s NYC about corruption, murder, and the things that haunt us.

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    https://patreon.com/darksideofseoul

    Book a tour of The Dark Side of Seoul Ghost Walk at https://darksideofseoul.com

    Listener Mail! Send us a message (Instagram, Facebook, email) and we might read it on air.

    Music by Soraksan

    Top tier Patrons

    Angel Earl
    Joel Bonomini
    Shaaron Cullen
    Devon Hiphner
    Minseok Lee
    Laura Casey
    Jane Hargrave
    Sarah Ford
    Alix Radilla
    Ryan Berkebile
    Ashley Rigby
    Terra Suttill
    Gabi Palomino

  • Korean Horror TV | Guest: Pierce Conran (K-Drama Critic)

    Korean Horror TV | Guest: Pierce Conran (K-Drama Critic)

    South Korea huddled every Sunday night from the ‘70s to late ‘80s to watch the horror series “Hometown Legends” (Jeonseolui Gohyang 전설의고향). Now Korean horror TV is experiencing a resurgence. What makes Korean horror TV unique? How does it differ from horror film? 

    XYZ Films hires Pierce Conran as South Korea executive (exclusive) | News |  Screen

    Guest – Pierce Conran

    K-Drama Critic – South China Morning Post

    Reporter – KoBiz

    Arirang Culture YouTube 

    Join our Patreon to get more stuff

     

    Book a tour of The Dark Side of Seoul Ghost Walk at https://darksideofseoul.com

    Listener Mail! Send us a message (Instagram, Facebook, email) and we might read it on air.

    Music by Soraksan

    Top tier Patrons

    Angel Earl
    Joel Bonomini
    Jamie Staley
    Shaaron Cullen
    Devon Hiphner
    Minseok Lee
    Laura Casey
    Jane Hargrave
    Sarah Ford

  • “The cinema was made for horror movies.”

    One of the greatest frights of all — the end of the weekend. As you wind down Sunday, settle in with Mark Gatiss and his excellent A History of Horror.