If you've been scrolling through YouTube lately looking for compelling Sasquatch footage, there's a video worth checking out that breaks down two pieces of evidence that have been making the rounds. The creator over at Non-Fictionation put together a breakdown of what they consider to be some of the most believable Bigfoot clips currently floating around the internet, and honestly, the analysis is pretty fascinating.
The first clip comes from Canada and was originally hosted on a channel called Between the Veil. What makes this one stand out is the level of detail you can actually see. The figure is captured smacking a tree with what looks like a thick branch, maybe four or five inches around, and then tossing it with surprising force. The part that really got people talking is the brief moment where the camera catches the face. It's only a few frames, but the features are strikingly human-like while still having those distinct Sasquatch characteristics, broad, heavy brow, hair covering most of the face, and a body build that doesn't match any known primate. The way it moves, the deliberate aggression toward the tree, and then that almost defiant glance toward the camera, it's the kind of behavior that researchers have described in encounter reports for decades.
The second clip is more recent and comes out of Oklahoma. It was posted on October 3rd, 2024, by a regular guy on his Instagram, just a normal account with pictures of his kid, haircuts, pool games, the usual stuff. Then suddenly there's this videoed "Scariest moment of my life, and I really think I caught a Bigfoot on camera in parallel forest, Oklahoma." He described being out sightseeing when he spotted something in the distance and started shaking as he typed. The footage shows a figure moving through the trees, and the detail is clearer than you'd expect from a random cell phone video. What happened next was predictable, the comments section turned into a circus. People flooded in calling it fake, making jokes, comparing it to their mother-in-law, the usual deflection tactics. The Non-Fictionation creator makes an interesting point about this pattern, noting how any time clear footage surfaces, the immediate response is mass dismissal rather than genuine curiosity.
The video also touches on a few other notable pieces of evidence worth mentioning. There's the white Sasquatch sighting out of Pennsylvania, which has its own eerie quality to it. The creator also brings up the Patterson-Gimlin film and the recent claims that it might have been staged, though they push back on that idea, pointing out that even if the suit was real, the reason they made it in the first place was because people were already reporting encounters. And then there's the Colorado train footage, where a figure was spotted standing out in the open mountainside as a train passed by. The logistics of faking that one are staggering, dressing up in a full suit, hiking out into remote terrain, and timing your appearance perfectly with passing trains, it stretches credibility.
What makes this breakdown worth watching is the way it ties everything together. The creator isn't just showing clips, they're asking the obvious question: if these are all hoaxes, why would someone go to such extreme lengths for content that mostly gets mocked and dismissed? The Occam's Razor argument cuts both ways here. Either we're looking at a coordinated effort by multiple people across different states and countries to build elaborate suits and stage encounters in increasingly difficult conditions, or we're looking at something that's actually out there and has been hiding in plain sight while the world refuses to take it seriously.
The Canada clip in particular is worth hunting down if you can find it. Between the Veil put it up in 2024, and it's one of those rare pieces of footage where you can actually see facial features without it being a blurry blob in the distance. The Oklahoma footage is still circulating on social media if you want to check it out for yourself.
Either way, it's a good reminder that the evidence keeps piling up, even if the conversation around it stays stuck in the same old patterns of denial and ridicule.