i4Seer presents
Horror for readers who like their scares smart, their mysteries real, and their devices homemade. No gore. No nightmares. Just the good kind of scared.
Standalone horror adventures. Real kids. Real scares. Every book a new nightmare.
Every Seer Frights book drops a group of kids into an ordinary place that turns wrong. A swamp behind a fence. A summer camp cabin. A city bus that takes a wrong turn.
There's always a mystery with layers — what they think is happening versus what's actually happening. There's always something that costs them. And there's always that last question at the end that won't let you sleep.
Each book stands alone. Read them in any order. But once you start looking… you can't stop.
Each book. A new place. A new scare. A new reason to watch.
Everything you need to build the devices. One box. No hunting for parts.
Status
We're sourcing components and assembling the first batch of kits. Email us to get notified when they're ready to ship.
frights.kit@i4seer.com Copied!
No spam. One email when kits are live. That's it.
Want an adventure? Gather your own parts — check the parts list for available suppliers.
Every villain built something. Now you can too.
⚠ Don't build alone — she watches, and so should your adult
Seer Frights is a horror series by B. Carter, published by Institute for Seer LLC.
Every book follows the same formula: real kids, an ordinary place that turns wrong, a mystery with layers, and an ending that answers the big question — but leaves one smaller question that won't let you sleep.
No gore. No graphic violence. No nightmares you can't shake. Just smart scares, real friendship, and the kind of story you tell your friends at lunch the next day.
Think Goosebumps meets Scooby-Doo.
B. Carter is a Native American computer engineer, veteran, rock collector, hiker, and lifelong reader of adventure books, manga, and comics. He holds a PhD in Computer Engineering and Computer Science. When he's not writing, he's hiking with a backpack full of sensors, seeing what happens when circuits meet the real world. The Seer Frights series started because he thought the best scary stories are the ones where you can build the thing that scared you.
"We saw it . . ."