Original ‘Possession’ Star Isabelle Adjani Gives Margaret Qualley Her Blessing on Remake
‘Backrooms 2’ – Kane Parsons Reportedly Looking for Screenwriter to Collaborate With
‘Paranormal Activity’ Broadway Stage Play Announces Cast
‘Onslaught’ Trailer – Adam Wingard’s A24 Movie Features Jason Voorhees-Like Super Soldiers
Experience the Dangers of the Yucatan Jungle in ‘Wetiko’ Clip [Exclusive]
‘The Vampire Lestat’ Bares Its Soul With A Rock N’ Roll Blood-Soaked Spectacle [Review]
‘Widow’s Bay’ – Guillermo del Toro Calls Horror-Comedy the Best Streaming Series in Years
‘The Birds’ – Sarah Snook Attached to Limited Series Remake of Nature Gone Wild Classic
Long Lost ‘Late Night Horror’ Vampire Anthology Episode Discovered and Set to Debut This Fall
‘That Texas Blood’ – Cormac McCarthy Meets John Carpenter in FX’s Neo-Noir TV Series
‘The Vampire Lestat’ Bares Its Soul With A Rock N’ Roll Blood-Soaked Spectacle [Review]
‘MOLE’ Meshes Process-Focused Gameplay With Satisfying Psychological Horror [Review]
‘Backrooms’ Review – A Disturbing Liminal Voyage Through The Human Mind
‘sMOTHERed’ Review – This Shudder Original Delivers Atmospheric Chills But Not Much Else
Underappreciated Slasher ‘Terror Train’ Gets a Welcome New 4K UHD Showcase
Urban Legends, Serial Killers, and Space Epics: 10 Horror Books We Can’t Wait to Read This June
Bleak Week: 5 Despairing Horror Movies to Stream This Week
The 10 Best Horror Movies Streaming on Tubi [June 2026]
Five Key Differences Between Markiplier’s ‘Iron Lung’ And The Game
‘Breeders’ vs. ‘Breeders’: The Strange Case of an Unofficial Horror Remake
Escape an Office Complex That Won’t Let You Leave in ‘Zangyou’ [Trailer]
Playable Demo Now Available for Lovecraftian Horror ‘Dark Lessons’ [Trailer]
Debut Trailers Galore During The Horror Game Awards Midsummer Night’s Scream Showcase [Video]
More Creepy Visuals Revealed in Newest Trailer for ‘Lucid Falls’ [Watch]
‘Forgive Me Father’ Devs Unveil Bloody Dystopian FPS ‘DIOXIDE’ [Trailer]
Escape an Office Complex That Won’t Let You Leave in ‘Zangyou’ [Trailer]
Playable Demo Now Available for Lovecraftian Horror ‘Dark Lessons’ [Trailer]
Debut Trailers Galore During The Horror Game Awards Midsummer Night’s Scream Showcase [Video]
More Creepy Visuals Revealed in Newest Trailer for ‘Lucid Falls’ [Watch]
‘Forgive Me Father’ Devs Unveil Bloody Dystopian FPS ‘DIOXIDE’ [Trailer]
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A new month means a new guide as titles are added (and dropped) from streaming services. Let’s unpack the most exciting titles that are available to watch on Tubi in June 2026.
Alien Vs. Predator (2004)
All Of Us Strangers (2023)
Blink Twice (2024)
Brightburn (2019)
Congo (1995)
Independence Day (1996)
I Saw The TV Glow (2024)
The Last House Of The Left (2009)
Overlord (2018)
Stepfather (2026)
What’s your favorite from the list above? Will you check out the new Original? Sound off in the comments below
Joe is a TV addict with a background in Film Studies. He co-created TV/Film Fest blog QueerHorrorMovies and writes for Bloody Disgusting, Anatomy of a Scream, That Shelf, The Spool and Grim Magazine. He enjoys graphic novels, dark beer and plays multiple sports (adequately, never exceptionally). While he loves all horror, if given a choice, Joe always opts for slashers and creature features.
All the Horror Heading to Hulu, Netflix, Tubi & Other Streaming Services in June 2026
Taye Diggs Stars as a Killer ‘Stepfather’ in Trailer for New Tubi Original Thriller
Satanic Slasher ‘Psycho Killer’ Heads to Hulu This Week
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We have entered summer reading season.
Schools are emptying, beaches are filling, and it’s a great time to pack a tote full of brand-new books and get some reading done in the shade. But even if the sun is bright, your fiction can still be dark, because June is absolutely packed with great new horror releases from rising stars and genre icons.
From a Psycho retelling to a dark twist on Peter Pan lore to a new book from a Pulitzer Prize winner, these are the horror titles we can’t wait to crack open this June. 
A blend of dark fantasy, Gothic family saga, and horror novel that’s received rave reviews from Stephen King and more, The Children follows the adult children of a legendary fantasy author who died when a fire consumed their home. Now, living their own creative lives, Guinevere and Ennis must revisit the secrets from the night of the fire, the darkness surrounding Ennis’s new art installation, and the truth of their family legacy in both fact and fiction. It sounds like a wonderful twisted nest of secrets and magic, and I’m eager to dive in. 
Just when you thought we’d run out of interesting ways to riff on Robert Bloch and Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, Leah Rowan comes along with Marion. As the title suggests, it’s the story of the Bates Motel’s most famous victim, but this time, she doesn’t die in the shower. She takes control of the knife and the narrative in this daring retelling of a proto-slasher classic. The story we know is just the beginning, and I can’t wait to find out the end. 
Through her first two novels, Maeve Fly and American Rapture, CJ Leede emerged as one of the most exciting new horror voices of the 2020s, and she’s just getting warmed up. Leede’s third novel follows an FBI agent on the brink of retirement, running from his past and from the unsolved case that haunts him most, as he’s slowly pulled back into a gruesome serial killer narrative. Victims start turning up again, wearing someone else’s skin like a cape, with no memory of how they got that way, or how they got a lone strand of unidentified hair tied around their tongue. Both a riff on The Shining and a journey into the dark Colorado night, Headlights is one of the year’s most exciting horror lit events.
Cynthia Pelayo‘s novels have always felt like dark fairy tales, and with her latest, she’s taking things into the realm of one of the most famous children’s stories ever. It Came From Neverland follows a version of Wendy Darling who, while working as a schoolteacher and as an aid to rehabilitate World War I soldiers, finds old fears returning when a student goes missing. It seems that an entity Wendy knows only as “Peter Pan” is back on the prowl, and unlocking her memories might be the only way to stop it. That’s right, it’s a dark Peter Pan retelling as only Pelayo can do it, and you know you want a piece of that. 
Annie Neugebauer’s The Extra ranks as one of the most clever and frightening horror novellas in recent memory, but that was only the beginning. This June, Neugebauer returns with the next book in what’s been dubbed “The Outsiders Sequence.” This time, Neugebauer’s strange world of doppelgangers and mimics turns to a couple on a hike who run into their exact duplicates, setting off a chain of events that will test their understanding of each other in terrifying ways. Neugebauer’s one of horror’s finest rising stars right now, so if you haven’t jumped on board The Outsiders Sequence yet, pick up The Extra and get ready for The Other.
Speaking of rising stars in the horror world, we’ve got Jonathan Janz, whose work has hit another level in recent years thanks to work like Children of the Dark and Veil. Now he’s back with Marla, the story of a local woman surrounded by urban legend, and her possible connection to a string of crimes in the community of King’s Branch. Is Marla a witch, a killer, a victim, a helpless child? We’ll have to read and find out in what feels like a perfect jumping-on point for new Janz readers.
Daniel Kraus has long been a favorite among genre readers, but thanks to his recent Pulitzer Prize win for his brilliant novel Angel Down, he’s more visible than ever, and all that visibility comes as he’s about to unleash a space epic with all the hallmarks of epic sci-fi and horror alike. The Sixth Nik promises everything from a sentient spaceship to a rogue planet full of plague to a nine-year-old “cultist” with an enhanced brain. This is Kraus playing in a brand-new sandbox, and genre readers everywhere won’t want to miss that. 
E.L. Chen‘s latest novel is described as a love letter to ’80s slasher films, and anyone who’s taken a dive into the meta-horror of Scream or My Heart is a Chainsaw will want to sit up and take notice. The book follows a group of friends who grew up in a town famous as the location of a slasher movie, where they frequently played the characters during midnight shows. As adults, they return to their hometown, and to the location of the slasher movie, only to find that someone’s out to get them, someone wearing a very familiar mask. This sounds like a blast, and the latest in an ever-growing strand of slasher novels reinventing the genre on the page. 
Modern horror master Paul Tremblay‘s latest novel sounds like his most ambitious yet, and that’s really saying something. Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep follows Julia, a former pro gamer who gets an offer she can’t refuse: For a hefty payday, she must pilot a man named “Bernie” across the country for her mother’s tech company. The catch? Bernie’s in a vegetative state, and his mobility comes from the AI chip in his head. As Julia moves Bernie’s body, Bernie’s mind moves through an unfathomable nightmare world, but where are they heading, and what’s Bernie really meant to find? Every new Paul Tremblay book is an event, and this one feels particularly special. 
This one’s technically a reprint, but David Demchuk’s Red X is so revered among the horror community, and particularly other horror authors, that it feels worth highlighting, especially during Pride Month. Complex and metatextual, Red X is about a series of disappearances and a demonic entity plaguing the gay community of Toronto, but it’s also an autobiographical sketch of an author navigating death, survival, queer culture, horror as a means of expression, and more. In short, it’s an essential, and this new edition, complete with fresh writing by Gretchen Felker-Martin and Anthony Oliveira, is a must-have.
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