Deliver Us From Evil 2020 Bilibili «PC»
“Deliver us from evil — not by removing the dark, but by giving us the courage to name it.”
“They told us to stay home to stay safe. But some of us were already trapped. Deliver us from the fathers who shout. From the mothers who drink. From the silence after the slam.”
In the danmaku of that final night, one line lingered above all others, scrolling gold: deliver us from evil 2020 bilibili
One night, Lin Wei received a final DM from @OldSoul_2003: a voice clip. The boy, now soft-spoken, said: “I got out. My grandma took me in. Thank you for lighting the lantern.”
One night, an anonymous upload appeared in his recommendations. No thumbnail. No title. Just a string of numbers: . He almost swiped past. But the view counter read zero , and something about the stillness of it pulled him in. “Deliver us from evil — not by removing
The video was grainy, shot on what looked like a 2010s camcorder. A child’s bedroom. Posters of Naruto and Sailor Moon peeled at the edges. In the center, a boy sat cross-legged, maybe ten years old, staring into the lens. Then he spoke:
If you meant a specific Bilibili video or creator from 2020 titled “Deliver Us from Evil,” let me know — I can help track or reconstruct it further. From the mothers who drink
The danmaku returned, but different—slower, heavier, each line a confession:
Desperate for answers—or distraction—Lin Wei sent a DM. Ten minutes later, a reply: “Watch this before midnight. Don’t watch alone.”
By June 2020, “The Lantern” had 80,000 followers. Bilibili’s official team noticed and offered server support. The original video—20200401—never resurfaced. But its ghosts found a home.
The link led to an unlisted Bilibili stream. No chat. No likes. Just a live feed of a different room: a basement, walls lined with old calendars from 2019. In the center, a radio crackled. A voice—same boy, older now, maybe seventeen—whispered into the mic: