Stories by @nihilus
355 stories

CapeSplatter (Live Action Original Horror Film)
On the darkest corners of the web, millions gather as voyeurs, paying in crypto and bloodlust to watch their favorite underground spectacle: real superheroes being brutally murdered in hundreds of different ways. This audience isn’t passive — they cheer, comment, demand escalation, and even bankroll the carnage. Their stars are a gang of sadistic erotophonophiles juiced with black-market powers, prowling the city to mug, humiliate, and butcher celebrity heroes in grotesque livestreams. But some of the so-called “victims” are monsters themselves — adored by day, predators by night. These celebrity superheroes are erotophonophiles too, sadists who take cruel pleasure in abusing their powers against civilians, torturing the helpless and posting the footage for their own loyal following. The few heroes who still embody real virtue are swiftly hunted, sucker-punched and exterminated by their sadistic peers, leaving only predators in capes. As the gangs circle each other, their atrocities escalate under the pressure of their paying audience, turning the city into a theater of horror. Predator hunts predator, civilians are prey, and the word “hero” rots in the gutter, drowned out by the applause of millions of unseen hands.

Solo Leveling: The Aura King (Live Action)
This is aura farming the likes of which has never been seen in the history of cinema. Sung Jin-woo, the lowest of the low, the E-Rank trash mocked by every guild, every hunter, every monster that ever spat in his direction, stumbles into the cursed System — and turns his existence into the grandest blood-drenched stage the world has ever seen. No longer a victim, he rips dungeons apart not with quiet survival, but with volcanic performance: tearing spines free mid-battle, standing tall as geysers of arterial spray erupt like fountains, crafting moments so brutal they look designed by gods of slaughter. Every kill is choreographed carnage, every pose carved from arrogance and despair, every roar calculated to make heaven itself shudder. The deeper he climbs, the less he resembles a man — veins blackened with power, aura boiling like a sun about to detonate, eyes glowing with the void. Heroes call him abomination. Monsters call him king. But the truth is worse: he is a spectacle born of trauma, a performer for no audience but the abyss. And as he ascends through oceans of gore, the question is no longer can he become a god — but will there be anything left alive when he does.

Jakarta Apocalypse (Live Action Film)
In the decaying underbelly of Jakarta, Indonesia, a brutal power struggle erupts between gangs that rule the night. Augmented with illegal cybernetic tech, these warlords settle disputes in gladiatorial pits, where flesh and steel collide in showers of neon-lit blood. But when a rogue hacker collective unleashes a digital plague, the chaos mutates into something far worse: the infected become half-machine, half-rotting husks — an army of unstoppable chrome zombies tearing through the streets. As rival factions scramble for dominance, darker forces arrive. Portals rip jagged holes in reality, vomiting demons straight from hell into Jakarta’s alleyways and night markets. The police mount a desperate investigation, only to be annihilated, shredded in the crossfire between monsters, gangs, and the supernatural. Amid the chaos rises an unlikely force — a martial arts gang of punk college dropouts, once campus bullies and street brawlers, now dragged into a war they barely understand. Their fists, once used for petty fights, are thrown against cybernetic warlords, zombie hybrids, and abyss-born demons in battles that should have killed them. With law and order extinguished, Jakarta descends into pure anarchy. Neon burns against fire, demons stalk alongside cyber-freaks, punk dropouts carve legends in blood, and gang lords crown themselves as kings of hell. Nothing can be contained, and the city itself becomes the battlefield of its own damnation. Heavy black and red color scheme

No One Can Save You (Live Action Vampire Film)
In Seoul’s eternal neon night, an orphaned young woman endures relentless gangstalking that escalates into torture and violence, orchestrated by a sadistic vampire coven that annihilates every vampiric rival in brutal gang wars until only they remain. As the entire city is consumed and turned into predators, they save her for last—not to convert, but to kill—fixated on erasing the final spark of innocence. Her brother, long harboring a darkness inside him, accepts their hunger as she is brutalized, her death revealing that nothing was ever worth saving.

Bullseye: King of Killers (Live Action Film)
Dozens of assassins seek out a single target, but Bullseye treats the crowded metropolis like target practice. Continuous takes capture his sadistic rampage—civilians executed at random, rival assassins carved apart with improvised weapons—as the city becomes a blood-drenched arena of chaos.

Devil's Leveling (Live Action Film)
The cataclysm of Marvel Rivals leaves cracks across the multiverse. Daredevil is not himself. His body has been stolen by a mysterious thrill-seeking interloper who revels in violence and sadism. Through a supernatural AR HUD interface, he receives a list: heroes to kill, contracts to fulfill. With every kill the system levels him up, gifting new abilities, expanding his reach, reshaping him into something closer to myth than man. His chosen weapons: Escrima sticks and dual handguns. This isn’t a curse to him—it’s joy, an opportunity to become the Devil incarnate. Elektra sees the truth and bows to it, gathering The Hand as worshippers of the Devil made flesh. Together they march through Hell’s Kitchen and beyond, not just hunting enemies but building a cult of fear, their relationship forged in shared bloodlust. As the interloper climbs the kill-ladder, the city learns the Devil doesn’t protect anymore—he collects.

Ninja Turtles: Gang War (Live Action Film)
In a neon-blasted haven of crime, each Turtle leads a gang of lethal martial artists, their territories bleeding into one another as Casey Jones’ rogue faction ignites fresh fury. When Shredder joins forces with a massive rogue’s gallery of killers, the city erupts into a brutal gang war of steel and blood, fought in rain-slick alleys under pulsing techno and EDM. One Turtle’s warnings linger unheard as bodies pile up, setting the stage for betrayal and ruin. A hyperviolent martial-arts neo-noir epic, drenched in cyberpunk atmosphere and framed as a gang-war crime saga. Shot in long, continuous takes that highlight the relentless choreography of urban combat, the film draws on the balletic precision of Kenji Tanigaki, the feral brutality of Timo Tjahjanto, the fluid intensity of Kensuke Sonomura, and the raw immediacy of Qin Pengfei. Visually, it fuses the neon-soaked nocturne of Wong Kar-Wai’s Fallen Angels with the icy, blood-slick brutality of Nicolas Winding Refn, all set to a pounding wall of techno and electronic dance music.

Power Girl: Pleasure to Kill
In a depraved spiral of gore and desire, Power Girl abducts multiversal variants of Supergirl and Wonder Woman, forcing them into a savage deathmatch against her. Every bone she breaks, every scream she wrings out, feeds her insatiable appetite for dominance—as the hyperviolent spectacle is livestreamed across the cosmos.

LEGION: The Culling
The Legion of Superheroes is exposed as a eugenics experiment, culling “imperfect” recruits. When Val Armorr—master of every martial art in the galaxy—uncovers the truth, his refusal to obey triggers a blood-soaked purge. Forced into gladiatorial deathmatches against his own teammates—broadcast live across the galaxy—Val unleashes his unmatched combat mastery to brutally dismantle the Legion one by one, until the final twist reveals the founders engineered the betrayals as a test… and he was meant to be their ultimate weapon all along.

LOBO: Planet Killer (Live Action Film)
What starts as a Czarnian bloodbath spirals into a universe-wide rampage, as Lobo proves there’s no contract too dirty and no body count too high.

Black Mask: The Gore King (Live Action Film)
In Gotham’s endless night, Batman is gone and the city has rotted into a slaughterhouse carnival ruled by Black Mask, a sadist who transforms murder into performance art. His cult of killers parades through the streets, ripping spines from bodies, splintering bones, and showering alleys in arterial spray like confetti. Civilians are butchered without mercy, most rival gangs are annihilated in torrents of gore, and the Bat Family is hunted down and brutalized in public displays of mutilation, their corpses left as trophies. Only the most depraved gangs endure, bowing to Black Mask’s reign and joining the nightly carnage. Professor Pyg’s Dollotrons and his gang of pigs haunt the shadows, grotesque parodies of heroes mocking Gotham’s fall while the real ones die screaming. Each murder is staged as a fatality, each dismemberment a ritual of ecstasy for Black Mask’s followers. The blood tide builds to its final crescendo as his army storms GCPD headquarters, turning the precinct into a cathedral of gore where every cop is butchered and displayed. By dawn, Gotham belongs to sadists and monsters alone, and with Nightwing dead leaving Blüdhaven defenseless, Black Mask and his allies set their sights outward—dreaming up demented plans to shatter Metropolis and drag even Superman into their kingdom of horror.

The Joker (Live Action Film)
Plot TBA

Street Fighter: The Endless Tournament (Live Action Film)
Akuma’s fiery entrance ignites a chain reaction of violence, plunging the city into a nonstop warzone. Block by block, subway to skyscraper, every fighter battles in escalating carnage until the streets themselves become a graveyard of warriors—and the ultimate tournament ground.

The Masked Ones (Live Action Horror Film)
When night falls, the city belongs to the mask. Draped in a flowing black-and-gold patterned Japanese kimono-like robe, he moves like a phantom shrine of violence, his gilded face gleaming under neon light. No one knows why he kills, only that his victims come from every walk of life, chosen without reason. Clubgoers, crime lords, strangers in the night, martial artists, civilians, all fall to his blade in hypnotic, continuous takes of blood and silence. He offers no creed, no cause, no legend to explain him. But whispers tell of an experiment, a depraved creation born from hidden hands on the dark web, funded by faceless patrons whose motives are unknowable. Some say what was made was not entirely human, that something answered from beyond and slipped inside the flesh. The warning is always the same: do not ask questions. There are truths in this world so twisted they shatter sanity, and the mask is one of them. For in hidden places, more killers wait, each more deranged, more unknowable than the last.

Black Cat: Nine Lives To Kill (Live Action Film)
Felicia Hardy, a kleptomaniac turned sadist, steals Superior Iron Man’s tech to forge her own nanosuit, unleashing a neon-soaked spree of brutal heists and gore-drenched murders. But amid the carnage, she and Superior Iron Man fall into a mutually dark and twisted romance that culminates in a brutal pact, granting her dominion as a crime boss while their bond fuels a world of endless, stylishly violent action.

The Punisher: War Journal (Live Action Film)
When Tony Stark aka Superior Iron Man's bounty system mutates into a decentralized intergalactic network of sanctioned slaughter, the world collapses into chaos, its streets ruled by killers feeding on endless blood money. Into this maelstrom steps Frank Castle, a dishonorably discharged war addict who no longer hides his lust for violence. After Killmonger assassinates T’Challa and begins distributing Wakandan tech across the globe, Punisher tracks some weapons dealers to Jakarta and acquires custom black and red battle armor, its crimson skull projected outward as a holographic symbol of terror. The suit’s arsenal includes stolen teleportation tech, allowing him to carve a bloody path across borders and turn the entire world into his personal battleground. He tests it first by massacring the black market that armed him, then sets his sights on the assassins and mercenaries who thrived under the bounty system, cutting them down with sadistic precision. His campaign becomes a grotesque mirror of the predators he despises, each kill dragging him deeper into psychotic joy. But vengeance finally consumes him and he falls in battle, only to awaken in fire and torment as the Ghost Rider, his eyes burning with something glimpsed in death but never revealed. His rampage draws the attention of Galactus, who offers him the Power Cosmic in exchange for servitude. Frank accepts, twisting the gift into a curse, and rises as the Cosmic Ghost Rider.

Silk: Pain and Pleasure (Live Action Film)
Cindy Moon, consumed by sadomasochistic desire, begins a lust-fueled romance with Spider-Man, only to watch him brutally smashed to pieces by his villains. The shock awakens a wicked pleasure inside her, and she spirals into a jovial, sadistic berserker state, slaughtering his killers while reveling in both violence and her own pain. Her hunger for more leads her into the grip of a sinister force that traps her with other Spider-Verse variants in a deadly battle royale. There she bonds with Kaine Parker, their romance blooming through carnage as they rack up kills together, until his ultimate betrayal leaves Silk dying brutally at his hands, her final breath a delirious mix of sorrow and ecstatic bliss.

Deadpool and Juggernaut: Bloody Wakanda
After Storm’s death ignites Wakanda’s fury, Black Panther leads his warriors into Tokyo—only to face a depraved alliance of Deadpool, Juggernaut, Taskmaster, Killmonger, Rhino, Sabretooth, Daken, Silver Samurai, Bullseye, Omega Red, and Warpath in a blood-soaked war where each clash grows more unhinged, each set piece more savage, and the violence escalates beyond even the carnage of the assassins’ first rampage.

Psylocke and Magik: Bloody Tokyo (Live Action Film)
In Tokyo’s neon underworld, wanted assassins Psylocke, Magik, and Jubilee turn the city into their hunting ground, carving through X-23, Kitty Pryde, Colleen Wing, Mantis, Domino, Lady Bullseye, White Tiger, and more in sadistic displays of martial arts carnage and fatalities. Their spree crescendos in a relentless continuous-take brawl with Storm—lightning, blades, and blood filling every frame—until Juggernaut blindsides her, catching Storm off guard and pulverizing her face into ruin with his fists to steal the bounty, leaving the assassins laughing in the wreckage as Deadpool prepares to join the slaughter. Sequel: Deadpool and Juggernaut

Random Multi-Fandom Fancast Compilation Vol 1
Just random characters I feel like fancasting