Editorial, by design
Sepia type on charcoal paper. No clutter, no banners, no infinite scroll. The reading experience of a quiet broadsheet, in your pocket.
App · Coming soon to the stores
What the world doesn't explain
A daily mystery for your morning.
Five minutes. PG. Verified facts.
Chapter one
Every morning, a single story appears. A vanished ship. A signal from the sky. A town that has burned underground for sixty years. One mystery, chosen for you, ready to be read with the first cup of coffee.
Anomalia is a daily ritual, not a feed. There are no infinite scrolls, no notifications begging for your attention, no algorithms learning what to sell you next. Just one quiet artefact a day, written like a paragraph from a documentary — calm, verified, and unafraid to leave the question open.
We keep it PG. We cite our sources. We treat the unknown with curiosity, not fear. Five minutes is enough.
A taste
In 1966, two men were found dead on a Brazilian hill wearing lead masks over their eyes. No one knows why.
In August 1966, two electronic technicians climbed a hill in Niterói, Brazil, to look for “spiritual entities,” leaving behind a cryptic note. Days later, the bodies were found on the grass: no signs of struggle, no trauma, no clear cause of death. Each man wore a custom-made lead mask covering his eyes.
Wow fact: The lead masks weren’t medical — they appeared to be hand-cut from lead sheet, with no clear protective purpose.
This is one of 14 mysteries ready for launch. Every morning, a new one.
Chapter two
Seven categories of the unexplained, each pulled from history, science, and the quiet corners of the world.
Ball lightning, the Wow! signal, sky sounds without source.
The theremin, the mechanical television, machines time left behind.
Dyatlov Pass, the Lead Masks of Vintém Hill, files still open.
Centralia still burns. Hashima sits empty. Maps go quiet.
The Dancing Plague of 1518. A town that could not stop moving.
Mark Twain arrived with Halley's comet. He left with it too.
The ones science hasn't closed. The ones still worth asking.
Chapter three
Sepia type on charcoal paper. No clutter, no banners, no infinite scroll. The reading experience of a quiet broadsheet, in your pocket.
Mystery without horror. We don't trade in fear, gore, or conspiracy. Every story is one you could share at breakfast.
One artefact a day, written to be finished before the cup is cold. A small, repeatable ritual — not another thing to fall behind on.
Chapter four
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Available June 2026 · Android first, iOS to follow