Creepy Voice Generator — Scary Text to Speech
Free Online Horror TTS with 6 Terrifying Presets
Generate terrifying voices for analog horror, creepypasta narration, Backrooms content, and more. Choose a horror preset, enter your text, and download scary TTS audio instantly.
Text Input
Enter text for the creepy voice to speak
Audio Output
Horror Presets
Deep, rumbling demonic voice
How to Use the Creepy Voice Generator
1. Pick a Horror Preset
Choose from 6 terrifying voice presets — Deep Demon, Whispering Ghost, Analog Horror, and more
2. Enter Your Text
Type your horror message or use the Magic button to generate creepy content automatically
3. Adjust & Generate
Fine-tune pitch and speed for the perfect creepy effect, then click Generate
4. Download & Use
Download the WAV file for your videos, games, mods, or creepypasta projects
Tips for Maximum Creepiness
- Lower pitch + slower speed = more ominous and threatening
- Use ellipses (...) and periods to create unsettling pauses
- ALL CAPS makes the voice sound more intense and robotic
- Try "Distorted Robot" at max speed for a glitchy AI breakdown effect
About Creepy Voice Generator
What is Creepy Text to Speech?
Creepy text to speech uses robotic and synthetic voice engines to generate unsettling, eerie, or outright terrifying audio from typed text. Unlike modern neural TTS that aims to sound human, creepy TTS deliberately embraces the uncanny valley — the space where a voice sounds almost human but not quite, creating an instinctive feeling of unease.
The classic Windows SAPI4 voices are perfect for this purpose. Voices like RoboSoft, Microsoft SAM, and TruVoice were designed in the late 1990s and early 2000s with limited synthesis technology. Their mechanical quality, combined with extreme pitch and speed settings, produces sounds that are genuinely disturbing — and that's exactly what horror content creators want.
Our creepy voice generator offers 6 distinct horror presets, each using a different SAPI4 voice engine with carefully tuned parameters. From deep demonic rumbles to glitchy AI breakdowns, each preset is designed for a specific type of horror content.
Analog Horror and TTS
Analog horror is a genre of horror content that mimics the look and feel of old VHS tapes, broadcast television, and public service announcements from the 1980s and 1990s. Popular series like Local 58, The Mandela Catalogue, and The Backrooms have made this genre a staple of YouTube horror.
Text-to-speech plays a crucial role in analog horror. The synthetic, robotic voices of old computer systems are a perfect match for the genre's aesthetic — they sound like automated emergency broadcasts, corrupted government messages, or malfunctioning AI systems. When a viewer hears a TTS voice delivering a warning about "not looking at the moon tonight," the combination of familiar format and impossible content creates genuine dread.
The "Analog Horror" preset in our generator uses Microsoft SAM at low pitch — the same engine that powered Windows XP's text-to-speech. This creates the authentic early-2000s computer voice that analog horror fans associate with the genre. For something even more unsettling, try the "Backrooms Entity" preset, which uses a deeper mechanical voice that sounds like something that shouldn't be able to speak.
Horror Voice Techniques: Preset Comparison
Each preset uses a different voice engine and parameter combination to achieve its horror effect. Here's what makes each one unique:
| Preset | Engine | Pitch | Speed | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deep Demon | RoboSoft One | 40 | 80 | Demonic possession, hellscape narration |
| Whispering Ghost | TruVoice Female | 80 | 60 | Ghost stories, haunted house audio |
| Analog Horror | Microsoft SAM | 50 | 100 | Emergency broadcasts, VHS warnings |
| Distorted Robot | RoboSoft Four | 300 | 220 | Glitchy AI, malfunctioning machines |
| Backrooms Entity | RoboSoft Six | 45 | 70 | Backrooms content, liminal spaces |
| Creepypasta Narrator | TruVoice Male | 90 | 90 | Creepypasta readings, horror stories |
Creepy Voice Generator FAQ
What is a creepy voice generator?
A creepy voice generator is a text-to-speech tool that produces unsettling, eerie, or frightening audio from typed text. Unlike normal TTS that aims for natural-sounding speech, creepy voice generators use robotic synthesis engines with extreme pitch and speed settings to create voices that sound intentionally disturbing — perfect for horror content, analog horror videos, creepypasta narrations, and scary games.
What voices are available in the creepy voice generator?
Our creepy voice generator includes 6 horror presets: Deep Demon (deep rumbling demonic voice), Whispering Ghost (eerie female whisper), Analog Horror (VHS-style SAM voice), Distorted Robot (high-pitched glitchy AI), Backrooms Entity (slow mechanical entity), and Creepypasta Narrator (unsettling male storyteller). Each uses a different SAPI4 voice engine with unique pitch and speed settings.
How do I make a voice sound creepy?
The key to making a voice sound creepy is manipulating pitch and speed. Lower pitch creates deeper, more ominous tones. Slower speed creates an unnatural, deliberate delivery. For robotic horror, use higher pitch with faster speed for a glitchy AI effect. Adding pauses with punctuation (ellipses, periods) also increases the unsettling quality. Our presets are pre-tuned for different horror styles.
Can I use this for analog horror videos?
Yes! The 'Analog Horror' preset is specifically designed for this. It uses Microsoft SAM's voice at low pitch to recreate the sound of early 2000s computer-generated emergency broadcasts and public service announcements — exactly the aesthetic used in popular analog horror series like Local 58 and The Mandela Catalogue. You can download the WAV file and use it directly in your video projects.
What is the best preset for Backrooms content?
The 'Backrooms Entity' preset is designed specifically for Backrooms content. It uses a deep, slow mechanical voice (RoboSoft Six at pitch 45, speed 70) that sounds like something inhuman attempting to communicate. For Backrooms narration instead of entity dialogue, try the 'Creepypasta Narrator' preset at slightly lower pitch.
Can I download the creepy voice audio?
Yes. After generating speech, click the download button to save the audio as a WAV file. WAV is an uncompressed format compatible with all video editors (Premiere, DaVinci Resolve, CapCut), game engines (Unity, Godot), and audio software. You can convert to MP3 if needed for smaller file sizes.
Is this creepy voice generator free?
Yes, the creepy voice generator is completely free to use online. No signup, no download, no installation needed. Enter your text, pick a horror preset, generate the voice, and download the WAV file — all in your browser.
What is the difference between this and the Trollge Voice Generator?
The Trollge Voice Generator is focused specifically on the Trollge meme character — it uses a single deep voice optimized for Trollge incident content. The Creepy Voice Generator is broader: it offers 6 different horror voice styles for various scary content types including analog horror, creepypasta, Backrooms, and more. If you want specifically Trollge-style content, use the Trollge generator. For general horror TTS, use this one.
Can I adjust the voice settings after selecting a preset?
Yes. Each preset sets initial pitch and speed values optimized for that horror style, but you can freely adjust both sliders after selection. This lets you fine-tune the creepiness — for example, taking the Analog Horror preset and dropping the pitch even lower for a more distorted emergency broadcast effect.
What are the best use cases for creepy TTS voices?
Common use cases include: analog horror YouTube videos, creepypasta narration, Backrooms content, horror game dialogue and sound effects, Halloween projects, ARG (alternate reality game) content, horror podcast intros, haunted house audio, and scary TikTok/Shorts content. The WAV download makes it easy to integrate into any project.