The Setup: Four urban explorers break into an abandoned mall looking for the legendary "Backrooms"—a glitchy dimension of yellow walls and buzzing fluorescent lights. The Verdict: A stylistic home run. Shot entirely on VHS-style found footage, this episode captures the claustrophobic dread of internet creepypasta. The monster design (a faceless, stretching janitor) is genuinely terrifying. The ending is bleak and ambiguous. It’s not for everyone, but for liminal space lovers? Chef’s kiss. Rating: 8/10 The Season 3 Thesis: Tech Is the New Monster If Season 1 was about classic haunted houses and Season 2 about urban legends, Season 3 is about modern anxieties . Daphne = AI dependency. Aura = surveillance paranoia. Tapeworm = body dysmorphia fueled by social media. Backrooms = digital uncanny valley. Even the dud Organ touches on medical mistrust.
The Setup: A couple moves into a secluded home and installs an "Aura" security camera. It catches intruders. It also catches a spectral figure that only appears when they’re arguing. The Verdict: This one is genuinely unsettling. It weaponizes the banal anxiety of smart home tech. The monster isn't a ghost—it's the manifestation of marital resentment. The final reveal that the creature feeds on unspoken truths is a gut-punch. One of the strongest episodes of the entire Stories franchise. Rating: 9/10 american horror stories season 3
Have you braved the Backrooms yet? Or did Daphne creep you out more than any ghost? Drop your take in the comments below. The Setup: Four urban explorers break into an
When American Horror Stories (the episodic spin-off, not the mothership American Horror Story ) first premiered, it was met with a mix of cult devotion and raised eyebrows. Season 1 was uneven. Season 2 got weirder. But Season 3? The 2023 installment—cleverly subtitled Huluween —finally figured out what it wanted to be: a deliciously nasty, low-commitment, high-camp horror buffet. The monster design (a faceless, stretching janitor) is
Watch the rest with the lights on and your phone in the other room.
American Horror Stories Season 3 is the horror anthology equivalent of a great short story collection. Not every tale is a masterpiece, but the ones that hit ( Aura , Daphne , Backrooms ) will stick in your brain like a splinter.
Let’s break down the blood, bots, and backstabbing of AHSs Season 3. Unlike the sprawling 10-episode arcs of previous seasons, Season 3 dropped five tight, standalone episodes. No mythology to track. No returning ghosts to remember. Just five self-contained nightmares, each clocking in around 40 minutes. This leaner structure forced the writers (led by the ever-mischievous Manny Coto) to ditch the filler and get straight to the kill.