These Cursed Instruments Have The Exact Energy Of A Haunted Garage Sale

Apr 19, 2026 08:00 AM EDT
A dump of cursed instruments featuring a violin equipped with a sniper scope and bayonet, a person wearing a full suit of armor made entirely out of tubas, and a guitar constructed from a real human ribcage and spine.
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Cursed instruments are what happen when someone hears “make music” and replies, “I’m going to make a problem instead.” I was in the driveway with the porch light flickering and my neighbor’s kid practicing something that sounded like a goose learning taxes, and I thought… maybe the universe is trying to warn us. Have you ever seen a thing and immediately felt like it has a threatening aura?

A cursed instrument photo showing a plastic Guitar Hero controller with a real guitar capo clamped firmly onto the neck over the colored fret buttons. This is inherently useless as the controller uses electronic switches rather than strings, making the "pitch change" purely decorative and frustrating.

When you're playing on Expert but you still need that emotional support capo.

A bizarre cursed instrument featuring a high-polish gold harmonica integrated into a black leather collar with a buckle. Designed to be worn around the neck, it suggests a hands-free musical experience that is as fashionable as it is likely to cause a noise complaint.

Perfect for the person who wants to look like a punk rocker but sound like a lonely campfire.

"cursed" grainy image of a man using a wooden clarinet as a makeshift smoking pipe. He is seen inhaling from the mouthpiece while holding a lighter to one of the lower tone holes, completely subverting the intended use of the woodwind instrument.

Band camp hit a little different after the jazz ensemble took over.

A tactical cursed instrument consisting of a classic wooden violin modified for warfare. It has a long-range sniper scope mounted above the bridge and a sharp metal bayonet fixed to the scroll, turning a delicate orchestral tool into a literal weapon of "sharp" notes.
A hilarious cursed instrument Marketplace ad for a tuba that has been completely crushed, flattened, and "repaired" with massive amounts of silver duct tape. The caption reads: "Tuba for sale, couple of dents, plays fine. $2000 obo, no lowballs I know what I got."
A painful cursed instrument close-up of a digital keyboard. A beginner has labeled the white keys with permanent marker, but instead of the musical scale (A-G), they have simply continued the alphabet, resulting in keys labeled H, I, J, and K.

Tell me you skipped music theory without telling me you skipped music theory.

A DIY cursed instrument hack where a beige plastic school recorder has been installed as the arm of a showerhead. The mouthpiece is attached to the wall, implying that water sprays out of the finger holes for a chaotic, melodic bathing experience.
A dramatic and heavy cursed instrument photo of an old upright piano being crushed by the massive, dirt-caked bucket of an excavator. The keys are splintering and the internal strings are visible as the machinery provides a final, crushing "performance."
An ominous cursed instrument sighting in an antique shop. A vintage brass bulb horn hangs from a wooden shelf with a simple, handwritten yellow sticky note attached to the stem that just says: "Don’t."

That sign can't stop me because I can't read (and I love chaos).

A wide-necked cursed instrument featured on the "Musical Instruments with Chaotic Auras" account. The electric guitar has an impossibly wide fretboard featuring approximately 18 strings, making a standard human hand look comically small and incapable of playing a single chord.
A cursed instrument guitar shaped like Patrick Star from The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie. The body features Patrick’s torso wearing his iconic green trunks, fishnet stockings, and black high-heeled boots. His dazed, smug face is printed on the upper neck, making every chord feel like a fever dream.
A maximalist cursed instrument anime guitar themed after Madoka Kaname. The body is an enormous, sprawling white dress with pink accents and massive feathered wings that extend far beyond the fretboard. It is a masterpiece of "magical girl" excess that looks impossible to hold comfortably.

Play one chord on this and you’re legally obligated to save the universe.

A surreal and slightly cursed instrument moment captured on the Tiangong space station. Chinese astronaut Wang Yaping is shown floating in zero gravity while playing a traditional wooden flute. The tech-heavy interior is draped in festive red banners, blending ancient music with interstellar travel.
A terrifying cursed instrument modification featuring a trombone. The standard brass bell has been replaced with a massive, realistic rattlesnake head, fangs bared and mouth wide open, giving the impression that the music is being hissed directly at the audience.
A peak cursed instrument photo of a student wearing "Tuba Armor." The person is encased in brass, with tuba bells serving as pauldrons and a pointed bell used as a wizard’s hat. They hold a conductor’s baton like a magical staff, ready for a high-decibel quest.

When the bard finally multi-classes into a tank.

The legendary and highly cursed instrument known as the "Wangcaster." This wooden electric guitar is custom-carved so that the body and the headstock are shaped like male genitalia. It is an anatomically explicit piece of craftsmanship that brings a literal meaning to "playing with yourself."
A complex cursed instrument wheel consisting of six harmonicas joined at their ends to form a star-shaped rotation device. This design theoretically allows a musician to switch between six different keys by simply spinning the wheel against their mouth mid-song.
A grimly iconic cursed instrument news headline: "Man builds guitar out of his dead uncle's skeleton." The images show a guitar neck bolted to a real human ribcage and spine. The creator, Prince Midnight, reportedly uses it to play black metal so his uncle can "shred for all eternity."

Family reunions just got significantly more metal.

A bizarre cursed instrument fusion of a ceramic toilet and a tuba. The floral-patterned toilet bowl has been modified with a bridge and strings on the seat, while a large brass tuba horn is attached to the plumbing as a giant, melodic exhaust pipe.
A visually striking cursed instrument X-ray of a Celtic harp passed through airport security. The scan reveals the internal skeletal structure of the instrument, with the metal tuning pins and internal supports glowing in neon blue and orange against the ghostly wood frame.

This is weird instruments chaos, the kind of music memes fuel that thrives on internet humor and questionable decisions. Some of these look like they’d summon a thunderstorm in a school band room. Others feel like they were built during a late-night “I can fix it” episode that got out of hand.

Let’s meet the cursed instruments you don’t make eye contact with

There are cursed instruments that are funny because they’re useless, and then there are cursed instruments that are funny because they’re technically usable, which is somehow worse. The useless ones are like decorative chaos. The usable ones are like… oh no, someone could actually bring this to an open mic. That’s how you get a new local legend.

The weird instruments in here also have that DIY confidence I both admire and fear. It’s the same vibe as “my uncle wired the ceiling fan himself” except now it’s musical. You can practically hear the sentence, “Hold on, I’ve got an idea,” right before a perfectly normal object becomes a sound-making threat.

And then there’s the category I call “internet humor made physical.” You know, the stuff that feels like a meme escaped your phone and crawled into the real world. It’s cosplay-level commitment, workshop-level craftsmanship, and absolutely zero interest in being subtle. Do I want to hear these played? Not really. Do I want to know who made them and why? Unfortunately, yes.

If you want more delightfully cursed creativity after this, you should absolutely read 20 DIY Projects That Started With Confidence And Ended With Screaming, 35 Thrift Store Treasures That Felt Slightly Haunted and 28 Outfits That Should’ve Been Stopped By One Honest Friend.

Mike Hartley is a suburban storyteller who respects artistic expression, fears the phrase “custom mod,” and would prefer his music gear to be less haunted.

Michael Hartley, or just "Mike," is an editor and seasoned meme historian whose articles have traced the evolution of meme humor from early Impact-font classics to today’s TikTok sensations. With nearly a decade spent as senior editor at ViralHype and as a regular contributor to Cheezburger, Mike has dissected the rise of meme legends such as Bad Luck Brian, Success Kid, and Doge. When he's not hunting down meme gold for Thunder Dungeon, Mike teaches workshops on meme marketing and the psychology behind shareable content.
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