In a terrifying new revelation, Vu Mong Lung’s spirit has reportedly returned with a dire warning: his best friend and crucial witness Guo Junchen is facing a life-threatening threat, marked by blood signs on his birthday and whispers of ritual sacrifice that leave everyone frozen in horror. The fresh details push the fear to a breaking point—the string of unexplained deaths in China’s showbiz world shows no sign of stopping, and the next name on the list may already be chosen. Who lurks behind this darkness, and does Guo Junchen still have time to escape and expose the truth?
The chilling message surfaced in 2026 via British medium Ty Williams’ livestreams and viral clips, where she claimed to channel Yu Menglong’s (Vu Mong Lung) restless entity. Yu allegedly warned that Guo Junchen—his closest ally and possible holder of evidence against exploitative forces—bears “blood signs” (mysterious marks or omens on his birthday, October 25 in some accounts) signaling failed rituals now redirecting danger toward him. The spirit’s plea: Guo risks becoming the next “substitute” in a pattern of sacrifices tied to shadowy entertainment powers seeking to bury secrets.

Yu’s September 11, 2025, death—officially a drunken fall—sparked endless speculation. Leaked forensics (multi-directional trauma, organ damage, signs of assault) contradicted the quick closure. Rumors swirled of management retaliation (linked to companies accused of unfair contracts, blackmail, and artist exploitation), with Yu’s pre-death complaints about industry darkness seen as motive for silencing.
Guo Junchen emerges as pivotal: alleged confidant who may possess recordings, testimonies, or knowledge of threats. Viral posts claim he’s gone missing or silent, with psychic visions depicting him as marked for elimination after the “ritual” on Yu failed (perhaps tied to longevity, power, or karmic transfer folklore). Details include EVP captures, symbolic signs (rainbows, dragons), and warnings of surveillance or retribution from “evil accomplices” in agencies, producers, and higher circles.
The fear escalates amid a perceived pattern: multiple artists connected to similar management face tragic ends—disappearances, accidents, suicides—fueling theories of organized suppression. Overseas investigations and fan networks (e.g., YouTube exposés, Facebook groups) amplify calls for Guo’s protection, with global signatures demanding probes into the “chain of deaths.”
Cultural resonance is strong: Chinese folklore of vengeful ghosts and elite occultism blends with real distrust of an opaque industry. While no proof substantiates spirit claims or active threats to Guo, the narrative refuses to fade—censorship only intensifies suspicion.
Advocates argue time is critical: if Guo holds truth (videos, diaries exposing abuse), his survival could unravel the web. Skeptics call it paranoia born of grief, but for millions, the warning feels real. As Beijing’s persistent fog symbolizes unresolved blood, the question haunts: Who orchestrates this darkness, and can Guo escape to expose it before the next victim falls?
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