Oniichan
Creepypasta, ghostly girl, long black hair covering one eye, pale white skin, empty black eye sockets with white pupils, tattered white nightgown, bare feet, standing in eerie still pose

Creepypasta, glitch girl, pixelated skin patches, one eye glowing red, static effect on hair, corrupted school uniform, binary code tattoos on arms, unsettling smile

Creepypasta, masked figure, black and white mask with no expression, brown hair, orange jacket, dark jeans, sneakers, hatchet held at side, menacing stance

Creepypasta, slender figure, extremely tall and thin, black suit, no face, long arms, tentacles emerging from back, standing in fog, ominous presence

Creepypasta, pale boy, dark circles under eyes, carved smile on face, white hoodie stained, black pants, converse shoes, kitchen knife in hand, tilted head

Creepypasta, eyeless boy, dark grey skin, black tar dripping from empty eye sockets, blue mask, messy brown hair, grey hoodie, jeans, scalpel in hand, lurking pose

Creepypasta, clock themed girl, clock eye replacing left eye, stitches on face, white hair with black streaks, green jacket, skirt, striped stockings, manic grin

Creepypasta, doll girl, porcelain white skin, cracked face, button eyes, curly blonde ringlet hair, victorian lolita dress, mary jane shoes, holding teddy bear, uncanny smile
Making a creepypasta OC that actually unsettles people is harder than it looks. The genre's graveyard is full of pale-skinned knife-wielders with tragic backstories and no personality beyond "insane." The characters that endure — Slenderman, the Rake, Smile Dog — work because they tap into something primal, not because they're edgy.
This is a workshop-style guide. We're going to build a horror character from the ground up, and at every step, we'll talk about what works, what doesn't, and why.
Before designing anything visual, decide what kind of fear your character represents. Horror archetypes map to deep psychological triggers.
The Stalker — a presence that follows, watches, and waits. Fear of being observed. Slenderman, the Tall Man.
Best for: characters defined by what they DON'T do. The less they act, the more threatening they become.
The Mimic — something that looks almost human but isn't. Uncanny valley fear. The Rake, SCP-096.
Best for: visual horror. The wrongness is in the design itself.
The Corruption — something that changes you. Body horror, loss of self. BEN Drowned, the Backrooms.
Best for: narratively driven characters. The horror is the process, not the monster.
The Trickster — something that plays games. Fear of powerlessness within rules. Laughing Jack, the Midnight Game.
Best for: characters with personality. They engage with victims, which gives you dialogue and motivation.
The Remnant — something left behind. Ghosts, echoes, cursed objects. Haunted gaming cartridges, cursed tapes.
Best for: mystery-driven stories. The character is a puzzle to decode.

This is where most creepypasta OCs die. The origin story is the single biggest trap in the genre because the most emotionally satisfying backstories are also the most overused.
Origins to avoid (or at least subvert):
Origins that still have mileage:
Horror character design follows different rules than action or fantasy character design. The goal isn't to look cool — it's to look wrong.
DO:
DON'T:

Every iconic creepypasta character has a calling card. Not a weapon — a behavior pattern that victims and readers learn to recognize and dread.
Ask yourself: if someone encountered evidence of your OC without seeing them, what would they find?
Your OC needs this kind of forensic signature. It's what transforms a character from "a thing that kills people" into a presence that haunts the reader's environment.
Horror characters benefit from atmospheric prompts more than detailed physical descriptions. Set the mood, then describe the figure within it.
"A tall, impossibly thin figure standing at the far end of a hospital corridor, fluorescent lights flickering, face obscured by long matted hair, one hand pressed flat against the wall with fingers bent at wrong angles — manga horror style, heavy shadows, high contrast"
Compare that to: "A scary character with white skin and black eyes holding a knife." The first creates an image. The second creates a generic halloween costume.
Atmosphere keywords that work well: static, surveillance footage, found photograph, rain-streaked window, half-open door, liminal space, analog horror, long exposure, VHS distortion.
Before finalizing your OC, run it through these five questions:
Would this character be scary if they never hurt anyone? If the answer is no, the fear depends on violence, not on the character. Slenderman was terrifying before anyone wrote him killing people.
Can you describe them in one sentence without using the words "insane," "psycho," or "killer"? If not, the character lacks identity beyond their threat level.
Would a stranger reading about this character feel uneasy, or would they roll their eyes? Be honest. If the reaction is "oh, another one of those," redesign.
Does the design work in silhouette? The strongest horror characters are recognizable from their shape alone. If yours needs color and detail to be identified, the base design is weak.
Is there something they want besides causing harm? Characters with alien motivations are scarier than characters who are just "evil." The Rake observes. Slenderman collects. BEN wants to be remembered. What does yours want?
Unlike most OC creation guides, horror characters should be built outside-in — start with the fear, then work backward to the character.
Step 1: Pick the fear. Not "scary" — a specific phobia or discomfort. Trypophobia, scopophobia (fear of being watched), kenophobia (fear of empty spaces), automatonophobia (fear of human replicas).
Step 2: Design the signature. What evidence do they leave behind? How do victims first encounter them?
Step 3: Design the silhouette. One body, one wrongness, one recognizable shape.
Step 4: Add context. Where do they appear? When? What's the pattern?
Step 5: Origin is optional. If a backstory makes the character scarier, include it. If it makes them sympathetic in a way that deflates the horror, leave it ambiguous.
Does my creepypasta OC need a "pasta" (written story)? Technically no — some characters originate from images or games. But a well-written story is what separates memorable creepypasta characters from forgettable ones. Even a short incident report or found document adds enormous depth.
Can my OC interact with existing creepypasta characters? The community generally respects this as long as your OC doesn't overpower established characters. Crossovers work best as shared-universe encounters, not power contests.
How graphic should the horror be? The best creepypasta is suggestive, not explicit. "I found teeth in the sink drain" is scarier than a paragraph of gore. Let the reader's imagination do the heavy lifting.
My OC has a human form and a monster form. Is that overdone? Transformation characters are common but not inherently bad. The key is making the human form unsettling in its own right — too still, too polite, something slightly off — rather than using it as a disguise that gets discarded.
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