Skip to main content

Global Facebook Ouija board experiment on Halloween

This Halloween, Facebook users are being invited to take part in the world’s largest online Ouija experiment for the launch of the new IP adventure game app Haunt A Lot, developed by upcoming indie studio Czyonoft Studios
The Ouija Experiment is calling on 100,000 people worldwide to take part in the world’s first attempt to contact the deceased through the medium of the internet. Facebook participants will be connected to a live séance streamed in real-time on the 31st October at 10:00pm Eastern Time, from the secret venue in New York and the developer’s offices in London and Toronto. Once connected Facebook users personal data will be incorporated into the live feed and the letters spelt (if any) from the Ouija board will be automatically shared on their Wall and Ticker. 

Inspired by the visual style of Tim Burton, Haunt A Lot players have to navigate their lost soul across various levels to lay their body to rest. It’s dark, macabre fun and compelling gameplay – full of flatulating undead, exploding traps and more. 

Neoco will be blurring the line between social marketing online and social experiences offline – as they have done several times to generate millions of fans for other games with some of the biggest publishers in the world including Sega, Ubisoft and THQ. After recently working on the global Facebook activity for zombie, action blockbuster Dead Island on the PC, Xbox 360 and Playstation 3 which delivered record sales and held the number one spot for a number of weeks across the globe.  

Popular posts from this blog

Huntsville Comic & Pop Culture Expo 2026 Wrap-Up

Another year, another packed weekend of fandom in the Rocket City The 2026 Huntsville Comic & Pop Culture Expo has officially wrapped, closing out three energetic days at the Von Braun Center and once again proving why it’s considered Alabama’s largest celebration of geek culture. From April 17–19, fans from across the region gathered for a weekend that blended celebrity encounters, gaming, cosplay, and community into one sprawling pop culture showcase. A Weekend That Delivered for Fans This year’s event marked the 11th edition of the expo, and it leaned fully into its reputation as a destination convention. With a diverse crowd and programming that spanned all corners of fandom, the show floor stayed busy from opening Friday afternoon through Sunday’s final hours. Attendees explored a massive lineup that included over 200 vendors, artist and author alleys, panel discussions, and dedicated gaming spaces. Whether fans came for collectibles, comics, anime, or tabletop sessions, t...

Water for Elephants: An Immersive Circus Journey (Event Preview)

Step into a traveling circus brought vividly to life on stage. This fresh musical transforms the bestselling novel into a tactile, immersive experience. The rumble of tracks, the sway of ropes, the flash of lights… all come alive as the stage shifts beneath the performers’ feet! A young man leaps onto a moving train and discovers a new life with a traveling circus. An older version of him narrates, weaving memories through the unfolding events. The story remains clear even as the stage bursts with energy and movement. The music pulses through every scene, thanks to PigPen Theatre Co. Their sound hits with power, then pulls back to let the silence speak. Drums and brass slice through the energy, while softer moments find space to breathe and resonate. Jessica Stone directs with confident, sweeping movements and a calm, steady presence. Rick Elice’s script holds the emotional core tightly, making every moment resonate. The show feels authentic… worn hands, weary smiles, and subtle action...

Letter Lost: Postmarked Secrets - A cozy post office that hides rules and a deeper mystery. (Demo Preview)

Letter Lost drops you into the Kharnym Isle Post Office as its sole employee, tasked with the deceptively simple work of stamping, sorting, and dispatching the island’s mail. On the surface it’s a cozy workplace sim; polite locals, daily pay, and mandatory room and board that removes the hassle of commuting, but the office’s cheery routine is threaded with odd rules and quiet contradictions that quickly make the ordinary feel off‑kilter. What begins as a satisfying loop of weighing parcels and matching stamps soon becomes a game of attention: letters hide hints, patrons’ small talk slips into unsettling confessions, and management’s insistence that you never leave the premises reads less like policy and more like a warning. The demo covers your first four days on the job, teaching the systems while nudging you toward choices, obey protocol and keep the peace, or pry at the seams and uncover the post office’s darker purpose. Either way, those first shifts are a careful, uncanny invitat...