Drip, splat, gurgle — blood on screen lives in those three syllables, and getting them to land without veering into camp is mostly a matter of texture choice. These 40 clips lean into that range: slow drip from a height onto tile, the wet smack of a blood splat against a wall, blood pool gurgle bubbling around something that shouldn't be there, and the distant blood-curdling scream that tells the audience what just happened off-camera. A handful of viscera-foley takes use real wet material rather than synthesised whoosh.
Horror short films and green-screen gore edits reach for the splat and drip combinations because they punctuate visual hits with the right register. True-crime documentary work uses the more subdued single drips under interrogation footage — restraint reads as serious. Indie game devs building survival horror layer the gurgle takes under footsteps for environmental dread. Grab whatever the scene calls for, free to download with no signup or attribution required.