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The Conjuring Househoodlum -

In recent years, a fan theory has emerged claiming that one specific spirit at 1677 Round Top Road is the Hoodlum. This spirit is not Bathsheba. It’s a man named "Rory the Knuckle-Breaker," an apocryphal figure mentioned only in bootleg recordings from the 1980s.

The story goes: In 1892, a hired hand named Rory O’Malley worked on the farm. He was a drunkard and a brawler (a classic hoodlum). One winter night, he froze to death in the barn after a fight. Since then, he has allegedly haunted the second-floor landing, challenging male visitors to fistfights.

Witnesses claim:

While the Warrens (Ed and Lorraine Warren, the real-life demonologists) never named "Rory," Lorraine Warren once hinted in a 1986 lecture: "There was a tough. A real gutter rat. His energy was... low. Not demonic low, but morally low. Like a schoolyard bully who never grew up." the conjuring househoodlum

The keyword "The Conjuring Househoodlum" exploded in 2023, not because of a new movie, but because of a viral Reddit thread on r/Paranormal. A user posted a grainy photo from a tourist visit to the house (which is now owned by Cory Heinzen and is a popular overnight experience). In the photo, a shadow appeared to be wearing a flat cap and giving the middle finger.

The caption read: "Captured the Conjuring Househoodlum. He told me to leave his whiskey alone."

The thread garnered 45,000 upvotes. From there, TikTok creators began making "hoodlum ghost" skits, dressing up in retro gangster suits and dancing to 1920s jazz music while pretending to haunt a farmhouse. The character evolved into a folk hero—a "cool ghost" with a heart of gold and a tendency to steal your left shoe. In recent years, a fan theory has emerged

This ironic detachment is dangerous, however. Because the real Conjuring Househoodlum—if he exists—is not funny.

Located in the small, rural town of Burrillville, Rhode Island, a seemingly unassuming 18th-century farmhouse has earned a terrifying reputation as one of America’s most infamous paranormal hotspots. Widely known as The Conjuring House (due to its central role in the 2013 horror film The Conjuring), the property is also referred to by a much stranger and lesser-known moniker: “The Hoodlum.”

This nickname, far from referring to a gangster, is a curious artifact of the property’s long and complex history. While the Warrens (Ed and Lorraine Warren, the

If you are a veteran of the survival-horror genre, the gameplay loop will feel immediately familiar. You explore, solve puzzles, and run. The puzzles are a highlight here; they are integrated into the lore of the house rather than feeling like arbitrary roadblocks. They require observation and logic, providing a satisfying "click" when solved, which serves to break the tension just enough before ramping it back up.

The game does struggle slightly with its controls. Movement can feel a bit floaty, and when the game enters its chase sequences, the clunkiness can lead to frustrating deaths. However, this clunkiness also adds to the vulnerability of the protagonist. You are not a soldier; you are an ordinary person stumbling through a nightmare, and the controls reflect that panic.