Play with headphones to pinpoint the directional audio of her breathing.
Flying through the air, the Krasue is a floating female head, typically with a full face of makeup, long black hair, and . Dangling from her neck are her stomach, intestines, heart, and lungs—all trailing behind her like a gory comet tail. She hunts for blood, fresh meat, and the afterbirth of pregnant women. To see her is to invite misfortune; to meet her gaze is to court death.
: Players cannot fight her and must hide in rooms or behind furniture until she loses interest and moves to another floor. Difficulty Scaling
The Krasue serves as a "stalker" enemy that players must avoid while collecting money bags in a haunted mansion. Proximity Warnings
Unlike a ghost, the Krasue does not have hollow, empty eye sockets. Its eyes are .
The Krasue is one of the most terrifying and unique enemies available in Eyes - The Horror Game . Unlike the humanoid pursuers, the Krasue offers a horror experience based on verticality, unnatural movement, and sheer shock value.
Witnesses report that her eyes hold a deep sorrow mixed with uncontrollable rage . This is the tragedy of the Krasue: according to legend, she is often a cursed woman. She did not choose to become a monster; the curse was passed down or inflicted as punishment for a dark deed. So, when you look into the eyes horror Krasue, you are not just seeing a demon. You are seeing the last remaining fragment of a human soul, screaming from behind a veil of hunger. That psychological dissonance—beauty and horror occupying the same face—is far more terrifying than a typical ghost.
The curse can be passed down to another female relative through saliva, often if a dying Krasue tricks someone into consuming her infected spit. Behavior and Fears
According to Thai folklore, the is a woman—often depicted as a villager or, in modern retellings, an unsuspecting victim—who is cursed to live a dual existence. By day, she appears human, though often described as looking sickly, sleepy, or avoiding direct eye contact. By night, her head detaches from her body, lifting into the air with her heart, stomach, and intestines dangling below.
According to Thai ethnographer Phraya Anuman Rajadhon, the Krasue consists of a floating head accompanied by a will-o’-the-wisp kind of luminescent glow. Descriptions of this glow vary by region: in some tales, the Krasue emits an eerie green light, while in others, she glows a pulsating orange or sickly red.