But those 11 days live on. Hard drives in 14 countries still hold fragments of content downloaded during that window: a Japanese game show where contestants wrestle inflatable dolphins, an unaired pilot from 1987 about a psychic taxi driver, and a single, chilling .txt file titled DONT_WATCH_THIS.txt — which, when opened, simply reads: “You saw nothing. Tell no one. But enjoy the premium.”
Why? No one knew. Some said it was a stress test gone wrong. Others believed it was an inside job — a farewell gift from a departing engineer. A few claimed it was guerrilla marketing: give people a taste of the weird, then pull the rug. WTFpass Premium Accounts 2 - 13 October 2019
In the sprawling graveyard of forgotten subscription services, few names carry the strange, semi-mythical weight of . And no period in its short, chaotic life is more shrouded in user lore than the 11-day window of October 2–13, 2019 — the “Premium Accounts” drop. But those 11 days live on
Here’s an interesting, stylized piece about the event from October 2–13, 2019 — written as if from a digital relic hunter’s perspective. The Ghost of WTFpass: Premium Accounts (Oct 2–13, 2019) An Artifact from the Lost Streaming Era But enjoy the premium
From October 2 to 13, 2019, WTFpass offered Premium-level access to anyone who signed up — no payment needed, just an email. No credit card on file. No trial expiration warning. Just pure, unfiltered access to their deepest vaults.