Play the classic jumpscare maze prank online. Navigate your mouse through the labirinth to be surprised by a scary screaming face. Ask your unsuspicious friend to complete the game and watch his reaction.

Nothing compares to that jolt after watching a well-executed jump scare. Movies like Paranormal Activity and Insidious are known for the effect, surprising audiences with unexpected and sudden frights that seem to come out of nowhere. When filmmakers pull them off correctly, jump scare sequences can be some of the best moments in an entire film.


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And lucky for us, jump scare videos can be found all over Youtube as well. In a fraction of the time, the jump scare videos below can give you the same startle as your favorite horror films. So if you love a good heart-stopping-scare, check out the videos below with some of the best jump scares Youtube has to offer. Be warned though, these videos are scary and you WILL jump.

This jump scare promises scares from the very beginning, claiming to have proof that Michael Jackson's ghost is still lingering behind in the Neverland estate. Any fan of the paranormal knows that such "proof" is often very subtle and minute, so as viewers strain forward to see and crank up their audio to hear, this jump scare strikes.

The aerial angle of this jump scare already puts viewers on edge, setting up the man in the footage in a position of vulnerability. As a chair in the shop begins to drag across the floor on its own, the scene is set for terror. But as the worker steps off the screen for a handful of seconds, tension builds taut as we wait to see what his investigation uncovers.

Playing with your expectations, this YouTube jump scare video attempts to mix in some humor, while giving you a good startle. It features a young boy singing a song, and seems completely harmless. After all, what could possibly be so scary about a weird little boy singing a weird little song?

Like the Maze Game, this jump scare video is also popularly used to prank others, especially those who are unsuspecting. And there's just something about a strobing jump scare face that makes it all the more terrifying.

If the spider video didn't get you, maybe this snake jump scare video will. The huge creature seems to go on forever, and the longer you watch, the more the anticipation builds. Even though you're expecting to come face-to-face with the snake, the ending still manages to catch you off guard.

A jump scare (also written jump-scare and jumpscare) is a scaring technique used in media, particularly in films such as horror films and video games such as horror games, intended to scare the viewer by surprising them with an abrupt change in image or event, usually co-occurring with a loud, jarring sound.[1][2] The jump scare has been described as "one of the most basic building blocks of horror movies".[2] Jump scares can startle the viewer by appearing at a point in the film where the soundtrack is quiet and the viewer is not expecting anything alarming to happen,[3] or can be the sudden payoff to a long period of suspense.[4]

Some critics have described jump scares as a lazy way to frighten viewers,[5] and believe that the horror genre has undergone a decline in recent years following an over-reliance on the trope, establishing it as a clich of modern horror films.[6]

Though not intended as a scare, the film Citizen Kane (1941) included an abrupt scene transition of a shrieking cockatoo. According to Orson Welles, this was intended to startle audience members who might have been beginning to doze off towards the end of the film.[7]

While editing Cat People (1942), Mark Robson created the jump scare, in which quiet tension builds and is suddenly and unexpectedly interrupted by a loud noise, cut, or fast movement, startling the viewer. In the film, Alice is walking home along a deserted street late at night, and realizes Irena is following her. Alice begins to panic, running, and the silence of the night, the contrast between light and deep shadow, shots of the fearful Alice, and the intermittent clacking of high heels set up suspense: abruptly, a bus enters the frame with a loud unpleasant noise, scaring the viewer. The jump scare device is sometimes called the Lewton Bus after producer Val Lewton, who used it in subsequent films.[8][9] Prior to the 1980s, jump scares were a relatively rare occurrence in horror movies; however, they (in particular the Lewton Bus) became increasingly common in the early 1980s as the slasher subgenre increased in popularity.[10]

Carrie, released in 1976, has one of the first modern jump scares.[11] The scene in which Carrie's bloodied arm abruptly emerges from the soil at the end of the film, is credited as the inspiration for the use of a final jump scare in the 1980 film Friday the 13th, to show that an apparently dead villain had survived.[12]

The 1979 film When a Stranger Calls uses a form of jump scare to suddenly reveal the location of the antagonist to both the protagonist and the audience. Film writer William Cheng describes this as causing a "sudden vanishing of the protective walls surrounding the film's protagonist", in turn giving the viewer at home a sense that the intruder is also somehow closer to them.[13]

The 1980 film The Shining is known for its "misplaced" jump scares, whereby director, Stanley Kubrick appears to subvert horror conventions with seemingly banal occurrences which coincide with a dramatic cymbal crash preceded by a tense orchestral build up. Such instances include the appearance of a title card announcing "Tuesday" or when Jack Torrance, the film's main antagonist removes a sheet of paper from a typewriter.[14]

Resident Evil is often cited as an early video game to use jump scares. The player, during the course of the game, walks through a hallway where the music begins to lower. About halfway through the hall, zombie dogs will suddenly leap through the windows and the music will peak in volume and intensity.[citation needed]

The video game Daylight was described as being a "vehicle for jump scares", and though reviewers praised its successful use of jump scares, they commented that as the game wore on jump scares alone were not a sufficient tool for scaring players.[16][17]

YouTube prohibits jump scares in video advertising. In August 2018, a video marketing The Nun depicts the iOS device volume icon muting before the titular character appears with an incredibly loud scream. The ad was removed shortly afterward for violating the site's "shocking content policy".[22]

After the rise of YouTube, Internet screamers gradually transitioned from chain emails to reaction videos where people filmed as they pranked others to click on an Internet screamer and recorded their reactions or using a fictional character's screaming moments edited with jumpscare as it appears as though the character is reacting to a jumpscare. A prominent early screamer reaction video was uploaded on YouTube in May 2006 by user "Can't We All Just Get Along?".[26][dead link] The video features a boy sitting at a desk while playing The Maze. In the video, he asks, "Why can't I touch this?" and shortly after, an image of what seems to be a demonic monster pops up with a piercing scream (though it is not the Regan MacNeil one). The boy screams, hits the computer screen repeatedly and breaks the monitor, urinates in his pants, runs to the person filming him and starts crying. Since the upload, the video has been viewed over 25 million times.[27] Maze reaction videos were featured twice on America's Funniest Home Videos.[27]

Things like spreading rumors that get you fired

Things like sabotaging your work or being an obstructionist

Things like upping the ante on the harassment or abuse

Things like going to HR with a false complaint about you

Things like freezing you out, going to his work buddies who manage you or have control over your assignments, promotions, bonus, work, hours, perks, and what not, and insinuating [whatever will hurt you the most]

Things like waiting for you in the parking lot to scare you worse or even actually hurt you

Things like showing up to work after being fired for harassment and committing a workplace shooting.

Scared a coworker at Exjob who accidentally scared the shit out of me. She came up behind me and startled me while I had headphones on and was concentrating really hard on something. I ripped my headphones off and jerked around so fast I nearly upended my chair, and she practically pole vaulted over the cube wall. After that, she would knock before she came up behind me, LOL.

I remember this youtube video where a guy wearing a halloween mask pops out of a garbage can, and the guy getting pranked is startled and socks him right in the face.

Another idea:

Knock your drink on the ground. Insist that he clean it up and get you another one.

Or you could bring in a water pistol and shoot him squarely between the eyes next time he tries to scare you.. More seriously, a loud shriek might go a long way toward getting other people to stop him.

In a video shared on social media recently, Pereira was pranked by who seem to be his two sons in his own house. As the former UFC middleweight champion proceeded to enter the house, one of his sons stood behind a wall to try and jump-scare him while the other stood on the staircase to record the prank.

Starting our Halloween scares a little early around here!? #farmkids #cowkids #ranchkids #scardycat #halloween #scared #mask #scarymask #idaho #farmlife #idahofarm #funnyvideos #madeyoulaugh #hilarious

It's all fun and games until somebody gets hurt. Sometimes pranks that people thought would be cool turn out to be cruel, and even occasionally backfire with deadly consequences. It's no laughing matter when someone gets killed in the interest of some innocent fun, but it happens more often than you might think. Here are some horrible pranks where a little mischief turned into tragic mayhem. ff782bc1db

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