About
About The Cryptidnomicon
The Cryptidnomicon is a field encyclopedia of cryptids, unexplained fauna, and the communities that track them. We catalog what shouldn’t exist — rigorously, honestly, and without the breathless credulity that plagues most cryptid resources online.
Every entry in this compendium is researched, cross-referenced, and written to a standard you won’t find on community wikis or Reddit threads. We don’t take sides on whether these creatures are real. We document what people have seen, what the evidence says, and where the gaps are. You can make up your own mind.
“I started this project because the state of cryptid documentation online is embarrassing. Scattered forum posts, AI-generated listicles, and wikis where anyone can change an entry to say Bigfoot is actually a tulpa. Somebody had to do this properly. I figured it might as well be me.”
— RC, Editor-in-Chief
The Editorial Team
The Cryptidnomicon is maintained by a small team of researchers, writers, and field investigators. Each brings a different lens to the work.
RC
Dr. Mara Vasquez
Nolan Greer
Sienna Coe
Ellis Varma
Our Standards
Every Cryptidnomicon entry follows a consistent structure: overview, sighting history with primary sources, evidence analysis, ecological assessment, and cultural context. We include threat ratings not because we believe these creatures are necessarily dangerous, but because if they exist, understanding risk is part of responsible documentation.
We also maintain a “Former Cryptids” section — creatures once dismissed as folklore that turned out to be real. The giant squid. The okapi. The platypus. They’re a reminder that the line between myth and zoology has always been thinner than scientists like to admit.
Contact
Got a sighting to report? A correction to an entry? A creature we haven’t covered? Use the submission form or reach us at tips@cryptidnomicon.com