Compilation of paranormal videos exploring unexplained phenomena
ILLUSTRATIVE RECONSTRUCTION // NOT EVIDENCE

Overview

A new reaction video from YouTube creator Roxomnia has brought fresh attention to “Scary Comp. 2024,” a paranormal compilation originally assembled by content creator Bizarre Bub. The video, reviewed on October 26, 2024, presents a series of clips said to show unexplained activity ranging from possible poltergeist disturbances to fleeting apparitions. Rather than taking a definitive position, Roxomnia uses the compilation as a springboard for commentary, repeatedly questioning the authenticity of the footage and inviting viewers to judge for themselves whether the scenes are genuine or staged.

The format is familiar within online paranormal communities: short, high-impact clips sourced from social media, home security cameras, dashcams, and personal recordings. According to the summary, the compilation includes ten separate segments from a mix of 2024 material and older archival footage, all framed as evidence of unexplained phenomena. The clips circulated through paranormal spaces on X, where they continue to generate discussion around what can and cannot be explained by conventional means.

Key Clips and Claims

Among the most notable segments is “The Radio Studio Doll,” reportedly sourced from Antonio’s Facebook page. In that clip, a radio host tells a ghost story inside a studio, after which CCTV footage appears to show a small clown-like figure moving across the room on its own. Other clips focus on domestic settings: one security video dated July 21, 2024, allegedly shows a dark figure falling from a height near a parked car, while another captures a man at home as kitchenware is violently thrown from shelves by what appears to be an unseen force.

The compilation also leans heavily on the visual tension of ordinary spaces disrupted by strange movement. In one clip, a couple watching The Exorcist records a small decorative clown on their wall shaking in sync with the film’s climactic scenes, with the girlfriend suggesting that living across from a cemetery may be relevant. Another segment shows a teenager home alone hearing a crash downstairs before a pale face or mask appears near the stair banister; Roxomnia reportedly flags that one as potentially “a hoax” involving a mask. A separate clip shows a woman in bed filming a dark closet, where a face seems to emerge from behind hanging clothes.

Institutional Settings and Highway Footage

The more dramatic entries move beyond private homes into workplaces and public spaces. One warehouse or retail clip, dated August 2019 but discussed in the 2024 compilation context, shows a store manager investigating noises when CCTV appears to capture his hair being pulled backward by an invisible force. Another segment set in a hospital features a nurse filming a room that staff allegedly avoid because of reported hauntings; the footage shows a pale face peering from behind a door before she flees.

Perhaps the most striking image comes from a truck driver’s dashcam dated April 15, 2024, which purportedly records a translucent figure in a white dress standing in a highway lane at night. As with the other clips, the material is presented without verification, and the reaction format leaves unanswered questions about editing, context, and whether the footage captures a real anomaly or a carefully constructed hoax.

Context and Takeaway

What gives the video its reach is less the evidence itself than the broader culture surrounding it. The reaction style encourages viewers to participate in the evaluation process, balancing skepticism with curiosity. Roxomnia’s recurring refrain — asking whether the clips are “real or not real” — reflects the central appeal of this genre: it does not need a conclusion to remain compelling.

In that sense, “Scary Comp. 2024” functions as both entertainment and a snapshot of how paranormal content spreads online. The clips rely heavily on modern surveillance technology, which lends them an air of credibility even when their origins remain unclear. Whether viewed as eerie documentation or internet theater, the compilation underscores the continued popularity of found-footage paranormal media and the enduring audience appetite for unexplained images.