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The Ghost In My Machine

Stories of the Strange and Unusual

The Most Dangerous Games: The Runner

July 24, 2019 by Lucia

Previously: Hide And Seek Alone – Alternate Version.

Note: Please don’t copy/paste or republish the text of this post on other websites without permission.

There is very little information about the ritual game known as The Runner available online; I’ve only been able to find it on a couple of sites, and only in Indonesian (which means I’ve only been able to read it via Google Translate). The earliest version of it I’ve located was posted to the Indonesian forum and bulletin board system Kaskus on April 4, 2016, but I’m unsure if that’s the first time it appeared online, or whether it exists in other languages or cultures. I’m not even sure if it’s ever been available on the internet in the English language before.

Update 8/16/19: A reader pointed out in the comments that this one actually was posted to the internet in English prior to 2016: It was uploaded to the Creepypasta Wikia by user WroughttheMayor in 2014 under the name “Racing In The Dark.” This may have been the initial source. The reader also noted that they’ve seen it around the internet in a few other languages, including Spanish, so it’s been circulating pretty widely for some time now.

[Like what you read? Check out Dangerous Games To Play In The Dark, available for pre-order now!]

In any event, though, if you’ve been looking for a way to duplicate something and found that the Ghost Paper Challenge isn’t cutting it, The Runner might be what you’re looking for. It’s certainly not a low-risk game, though, so I’d think twice before undertaking it if I were you. For one, it involves blood, which is dangerous from both a blood magic perspective and a straight-up health one. For another, the cost of losing can be high. And for a third, the temptation to accept a challenge to a rematch can be strong.

Don’t accept it.

Nothing good will come of it if you do.

As always, play at your own risk.

Players:

  • One principal.

Requirements:

  • A long hallway or corridor with no windows.
  • A good pair of running shoes.
  • A sharp object.
  • Something you wish to duplicate. This is your wager.
  • Stamina.

Instructions:

The Preparations:

  1. Begin at night.
  2. Put on your running shoes.
  3. Do a few stretches — you are about to run a race, after all.
  4. Make sure your sharp object is sterilized and close at hand.
  5. Bring all of your supplies — including your wager — to your chosen hallway.
  6. Prepare the hallway: Turn out all the lights. If there are lit exit signs, cover them up. Close any open doors. Eliminate every source of light — all of them. Make it as dark as possible. If you can’t see your hand when you hold it up in front of your face, it is sufficiently dark.
  7. Using your sharp object, prick your finger or otherwise (carefully!) draw blood from your own hand.
  8. At one end of the hallway, use your blood to draw the starting line. The starting line must stretch from wall to wall. Make sure there’s enough space behind it for you to stand.
  9. At the other end of the hallway, use your blood to draw the finish line. The finish line must also stretch from wall to wall. Make sure there’s enough space in behind it for the winner to be able to cross it.
  10. You may also choose to draw a third line with your blood — one that runs through the middle of the hallway from starting line to finish line, separating your and your opponent’s “lanes.” This line is optional. (See: Additional Notes.)
  11. Place your wager behind the finish line.
  12. Return to the starting line. Take your place behind it. It’s almost time to race.

The Race:

  1. Once you are positioned behind the starting line, close your eyes, clear your mind, and think of your opponent. Do NOT visualize your opponent as a specific person; think, instead, of the idea of an opponent — the concept of one. Think as generally as you can. If you get too specific, your opponent may not appear.
    • If you hear silence: Your opponent has chosen not to come. The ritual has failed; do not proceed. Turn on the lights, clean up the starting and finish lines, and depart from the hallway. You may try again another time.
    • If you hear a voice next to you: Your opponent has arrived. You may proceed. Keep your eyes ahead of you; do NOT turn to look at him.
  2. Listen carefully. When your opponent asks, “What are the stakes?”, reply, “Double or nothing.” Do NOT say anything else or offer any other response. Do NOT look at him.
  3. Get ready. The race is about to begin.
  4. Say aloud, “On your marks, get set, GO!”
  5. As soon as you say “GO!”, run.
    • NOTE: You and your opponent MUST begin running at the same time. Do NOT begin running before you have said “GO!”
  6. Keep running, but pace yourself. This race is less about speed and more about stamina.
  7. Do NOT look at your opponent as you run.
  8. Run.
  9. Run for the finish line.
  10. Run.

The Prize:

  1. Run until you reach the finish line.
    • If your opponent reaches it first: You have lost the race. Your opponent will be nowhere to be seen — but nor will your wager. That is his prize, and he will take it for himself.
    • If you reach it first: Congratulations! You have won the race. Your opponent will be nowhere to be seen — but you will find three things waiting for you behind the finish line: Your wager, its duplicate, and a small piece of paper. The paper will have only a single word on it: “AGAIN?” Take your wager and its duplicate. Leave the piece of paper.
  2. The race is now over. Whatever the outcome, it is time to leave. Turn on the lights, clean up the starting and finish lines, gather your winnings if you took first place, and depart from the hallway.
  3. Do NOT play this game again.

Additional Notes:

The hallway may in any type of building or structure. It may be above ground or below ground. It may be a corridor in an apartment building or a tunnel in a subway station. The only requirements are that it have no windows, and that it be capable of being made completely and utterly dark.

Your wager may be any physical item you like — including living beings such as people. If you can touch it, and you want to duplicate it, you may use it as your wager. Note, though, that it is NOT recommended you wager any items of great value to you; if you lose, you will never see those items again. As such, it is ABSOLUTELY NOT recommended that you use people or other living beings for your wager.

The third bloodline — the one separating your lane from your opponent’s — discussed in Step 10 of The Preparations is optional; however, it is not necessarily recommended, either. On the one hand, your opponent may not cross the bloodline; you may therefore be certain that he will not interfere with you in any physical way during the race. On the other hand, though, it requires an… awful lot of blood and therefore is NOT SAFE for players to draw. Also, do you really want to risk weakening yourself before a race?

Concerning Pacing And Strategy:

Your opponent will always run at the same speed, neither speeding up nor slowing down. His natural pace is just a little bit faster than your own — but just because he runs faster than you doesn’t mean you can’t beat him.

Listen carefully as you run. When you hear him start to pull ahead of you, put on a burst of speed of your own in order to overtake him. You may not maintain your lead for long, but if you listen closely and pace yourself accordingly, you should be able to win.

Concerning Rematches:

In the event that you win the race, the paper waiting for you next to your wager and prize is your opponent’s way of challenging you to a rematch.

Do NOT accept it.

You will NOT win if you do.

And if you lose a rematch — the rematch you should never, under ANY circumstances, accept — your opponent will take more from you than just your original wager.

The Runner: FAQ.

***

Please don’t plagiarize this post. Linking to it or sharing the URL only is fine (and encouraged!), as is writing your own unique version of the game with sources cited and linked to, but copying/pasting, republishing, screenshotting, or otherwise reproducing the text of this piece in its entirety or near-entirety on other websites without permission isn’t.

***

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[Photo via mwewering/Pixabay]

Filed Under: Games Tagged With: corridors, duplication, games you shouldn't play, Ghost Paper Challenge, hallways, The Most Dangerous Games, The Runner

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Summer says

    July 24, 2019 at 7:54 am

    what do you mean you will lose the rematch? Your opponent is faster?

    Reply
    • Tessa says

      November 21, 2019 at 9:04 am

      He runs a bit faster than you do. Like x1 faster.

      Reply
  2. Syed Ahsan Ali says

    July 25, 2019 at 12:38 am

    Thanks Lucia once again for providing such content. looking forward to such content in future
    BTW I’m not good in english from Pakistan

    Reply
  3. SonOfSomething says

    July 25, 2019 at 11:35 am

    Great as always, just wondering one thing: if the ritual fails, can I keep my wager or do I have to leave it?

    Reply
    • Ask who Joe is says

      October 11, 2019 at 8:53 pm

      I guess you can keep it, since you haven’t really summoned anything stopping you from doing so. But if you want to be really careful, you could leave it there

      Reply
  4. Hayley says

    July 25, 2019 at 1:32 pm

    I have a theory that the opponent/entity has the ability to outpace the principal no matter how fast they are, but it is his strategy to lose the initial race on purpose in order to bait the runner into accepting the rematch and losing. Anyone have any thoughts on this?

    Reply
    • Cs says

      May 14, 2020 at 10:21 pm

      This is actually a great theory. Let’s just imagine that we challenge a Sonic or Flash.

      You know human’s pride when they win, right?

      That’s why “don’t fly too high, it’ll be much more hurt when you fall”

      Reply
  5. Emma says

    July 25, 2019 at 7:50 pm

    Can you use someone else’s blood for this game?

    Reply
    • Jamel says

      August 6, 2019 at 3:05 am

      No. If you’re going to be the one running the race, you have to use your own blood. Any attempt to use any blood besides your own would probably be considered cheating, which is the last thing you would ever want to do.

      Reply
    • SuperCaligro says

      August 9, 2019 at 1:21 pm

      There’s so many reasons on why not to.

      1. Your blood is what confines the entity to you and if you use someone else’s blood, you could wind up getting yourself and someone else hurt; namely whoever’s blood you used.
      2. The ritual also may not work with someone else’s blood if you have the intention of playing but the person whose blood you’re using does not.
      3. It also just goes against morality in general. You’re putting someone else’s wellbeing at risk for the sake of your own personal gain, even if they consent to allowing you to use their blood.

      Reply
      • syrie says

        July 5, 2020 at 6:52 am

        if you read the creepy pasta, it actually says yes. you can use someone else’s blood. but it isn’t recommended to draw the third line because as soon as you cross the first blood line, he can cross any of them too. and he might not take kindly to you trying to contain him

        Reply
  6. NoMarsi says

    July 26, 2019 at 9:47 pm

    Ok, some info about it:

    1. The Runner is actually as fast as light, literally the fastest thing in the entire world, no, universe, even. He’ll go easy on you the first time, that’s why you shouldn’t accept the next race.
    2. The Runner actually will make annoying sounds to distract you from your running, however, ignore these and continue moving (Just to let you know).
    3. If you put any living material (Plants probably count unless they’re fake) at the finish line, he will not hesitate to take it and he won’t go easy on you. Unless you’re Sonic, you won’t be able to beat him.

    If you actually wanna play this, here’s some info.

    Reply
  7. E_mme says

    July 30, 2019 at 10:56 am

    I’m assuming that this would be cheating, but if you wanted to create a lane for yourself and your opponent (so he couldn’t interfere with you during the race), could you make the bloodlines ahead of time, then rest for a day or so and race him after you’ve recovered?

    Reply
    • Wraith says

      August 3, 2019 at 7:18 am

      I have a feeling it would be considered cheating, tbh.

      Reply
    • Jamel says

      August 6, 2019 at 3:11 am

      No. Once blood has been drawn, the ritual has already started, and any ritual that has been started, must be completed.

      Reply
    • A random person says

      August 7, 2019 at 7:13 pm

      Well me reading a lot of these rituals and stuff,usually one of two things would answer this
      1.Most spirits don’t take kindly to loopholes.Is it necessary for me to say anymore?
      2.You probably need FRESH blood,in most of these you do so I would be on the safe side here(Well as safe as you can be if you make the lane)and use fresh blood.

      Hope this helps.

      Reply
    • SuperCaligro says

      August 9, 2019 at 1:16 pm

      That just sounds like looking out for yourself. But given that some ritualistic events can only be triggered by performing the required actions they call for all at once, it might be a waste of time.

      Reply
    • Wishe says

      August 11, 2019 at 9:20 am

      Your opponent would probably consider that cheating. And unless you have a long enough corridor in your house, wouldn’t the marks be wiped away?

      Reply
  8. DerWerwolf says

    August 9, 2019 at 2:53 pm

    Well, I’ve read about this some years ago in the creepypasta wiki (English) called “racing in the dark” and even in Spanish in another site, so there are some translations out there

    https://creepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/Racing_in_the_Dark

    The post seems to be from 2014.

    Reply
    • Lucia says

      August 16, 2019 at 1:42 pm

      Ah, thanks so much for the tip! I did try looking for earlier versions/versions in English, but seems I didn’t hit upon the right combination of search terms. I’ll add an update to the post. Thanks again!

      Reply
  9. Mary says

    September 5, 2019 at 2:28 pm

    If it’s completely dark, how would be able to see the finish line? Wouldn’t you hit the wall?

    Reply
    • CmOn_MaN says

      September 27, 2019 at 7:34 pm

      I bet if you did hit the wall, you should hear The Runner laugh at you…It’s what I’d do!

      Reply
    • Xander says

      October 28, 2019 at 4:58 am

      Well, if you bump, and you win, then it’s worth it, but if you lose, not worth it bumping to the wall

      Reply
  10. joseph says

    September 30, 2019 at 1:32 pm

    what if the hallway or whatever is like 15 ft long? XD

    Reply
  11. Ziaheart says

    May 1, 2020 at 5:58 pm

    That’s a lot of blood. Holy moly. It’s probably cheating to draw blood ahead of time a bit at a time to prevent overdrawing and then using the old saved up blood to draw the line, though. Kind of like what that one runner did; draw his own blood and then reinject it into his system to give him an extra edge.

    Reply

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