
Why horror fans make the best friends
Nobody wants to watch what you love
You find an incredible horror film — maybe a slow-burn Korean thriller, maybe a folk horror gem that’s been haunting your thoughts for days — and you’re dying to share it with someone. You text your friends. One says “I don’t do scary movies.” Another leaves you on read. The group chat goes silent.
So you watch it alone. Again.
If this sounds familiar, you already know the quiet loneliness of being the horror friend. The one whose enthusiasm gets met with nervous laughter or uncomfortable subject changes. The one who learned to stop recommending things because the rejection stings after a while.
The films that move you most are the hardest to share
You’ve probably had the experience of watching something that genuinely moved you — a film that explored grief or trauma or existential dread in ways that felt almost therapeutic — and having nobody to process it with. There’s so much you want to discuss: the ending, what it all meant, why a movie about monsters or ghosts or something lurking in the dark actually made you feel less alone.
But instead, you keep it to yourself. Because explaining feels exhausting when you know the response will be “I could never watch that” or “why do you like that stuff?”
But instead, you keep it to yourself. Because explaining feels exhausting when you know the response will be “I could never watch that” or “why do you like that stuff?”
2025 has been incredible for horror but that’s not enough
Here’s the thing: this year has been amazing for the genre. Sinners gave us vampires with soul. Weapons messed with our heads in ways we’re still processing. 28 Years Later delivered everything we wanted from a return to that world. Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein reminded us why we fell in love with monsters in the first place. The genre is thriving. Critics are paying attention. Audiences are showing up.
But having no one to talk about it with? That makes even the best year feel hollow.
What if the problem isn’t your taste in movies? What if it’s just that you haven’t found your people yet?
The isolation of loving what others find disturbing
Horror fans often feel like outsiders. Not because there’s anything wrong with them but because their passion gets misunderstood, dismissed, or met with discomfort by people who don’t share it.
You’ve probably been asked “what’s wrong with you?” more times than you can count. Sometimes it’s a joke. Sometimes it isn’t. Either way, the message is clear: your interests are weird, and you should probably keep them to yourself.
And yes, horror communities exist online. Reddit threads. Discord servers. Facebook groups. Letterboxd reviews. Podcasts with comment sections. But if you’ve spent any time in these spaces, you know they come with their own problems.
The conversations are fragmented. You post something thoughtful and it disappears into the void. Or worse, someone shows up to tell you that your favorite film “isn’t real horror” or that you’re a casual who doesn’t belong.
Gatekeeping. Elitism. Toxic arguments that go nowhere. Spaces so large and chaotic that genuine connection becomes impossible.
That’s exactly why Online Tribes exists.
Online Tribes is different. Instead of throwing you into a massive forum with thousands of strangers, we match you into small, intimate tribes of 20-50 people based on shared life experiences not just shared interests. Because real connection isn’t about agreeing on which horror sequel is best. It’s about finding people who understand you on a deeper level.
Our Horror Tribe brings together people who don’t just watch horror they feel it. People who use scary movies to process grief, anxiety, and the darker parts of being human. People who’ve felt like the outsider in their friend group and are ready to finally find where they belong.
No gatekeeping. No proving yourself. Just genuine community with people who get it.
You’re not broken for loving horror. You just haven’t found your tribe yet.
Why horror fans make the most loyal friends
The paradox of people who love darkness
There’s a strange paradox about people who seek out the darkest corners of human imagination: they’re often the warmest, most loyal friends you’ll ever have.
It’s not despite their love of horror. It’s because of it.
Think about it. While most people avoid discomfort, horror fans run toward it. While others look away from difficult emotions, horror fans sit with them willingly. This shapes who they are and how they show up in friendships.
Here’s what makes them different.
They’re comfortable with discomfort
Horror fans have trained themselves to sit with difficult emotions rather than run from them. Fear, dread, grief, existential uncertainty they’ve spent countless hours exploring these feelings through fiction. As a result, that translates to real life. When you’re going through something dark, a horror fan won’t flinch. Instead, they won’t change the subject or offer hollow positivity. They’ll simply sit with you in it.
They don’t judge your shadows
People who love horror understand that humans contain multitudes. We’re fascinated by death, drawn to mystery, capable of imagining terrible things — and that’s okay. Because of this, horror fans extend that acceptance to others. Got a weird hobby? A dark sense of humor? Thoughts you’re afraid to share? A horror fan has seen weirder. Consequently, they won’t make you feel strange for being complex.
They’re passionate curators
Watch a horror fan’s eyes light up when they discover you haven’t seen their favorite obscure film. First, they’ll craft the perfect introduction. Then, they’ll warn you about what to expect. Afterward, they’ll check in to discuss every detail. Moreover, that instinct to share meaningful experiences extends beyond movies. Horror fans remember what matters to you. They pay attention.
They understand that fear bonds people
There’s actually neuroscience behind this: experiencing fear together creates intimacy. Specifically, elevated heart rates, shared adrenaline, and the relief afterward all work together to forge connection faster than almost anything else. Because of this, horror fans intuitively understand that shared vulnerability builds real relationships, not surface-level small talk.
They’ve made peace with mortality
Horror forces you to confront death, impermanence, and the fragility of safety. As a result, people who regularly engage with these themes tend to be more present, more appreciative of connection, and less likely to take relationships for granted. Ultimately, they know time is finite. Therefore, they show up.
They’re fiercely loyal
Horror fans know what it’s like to feel like an outsider. As a result, when they finally find their people, they hold on tightly. Moreover, they understand the value of genuine connection because they’ve spent so long searching for it. That’s exactly what makes the Horror Tribe on Online Tribes so powerful — it’s full of people who’ve been searching for this kind of connection and are finally ready to invest in it. In other words, these aren’t casual acquaintances. Instead, they’re people who will show up for you because they know how rare it is to find someone who truly gets it.









