Welcome back to the annual celebration of imagination, transformation, and Halloween glamour. Halloweek is where characters step off the page and onto the stage, blending theatricality, storytelling, and high-production costuming with a live audience energy that has grown every year since 2018.
This Year: 2025 Feature — The Red Demon

October 2025 delivered a marquee performance in twin 4K edits, captured on Panasonic and Sony. The live broadcast ran over four and a half hours and returned here as full-length releases in November 2025. The Panasonic cut mirrors the live viewing angle with a front-of-stage perspective; the Sony cut offers a dramatic counterpart where the climactic effects travel straight toward the lens. Together they form a matched pair: same night, separate vantage points, and a complete view of the choreography, atmosphere, and practical effects that defined this year’s Halloween centerpiece.
Last Year at a Glance — 2024 Highlights
Halloweek 2024 opened on Sunday, 20 October 2024 with “Creepy Doll Dothy,” presented in two camera masters. The forward-facing Panasonic angle immerses you in the character’s porcelain menace and slow-burn theatrics; the Sony version complements it with a moodier, offset composition. Alongside the main night, three additions rounded out the season: “Seraphina Hexx: Witchcraft Unleashed,” recorded live on 7 February 2024 and later issued in both Sony side-angle and Panasonic edits, and the seven-and-a-half–hour “Nat & Lana Wednesday (2023)” double release, originally performed 15 October 2023 and added to the 2024 collection on 27 October 2024 in Panasonic front-angle with split-screen close-ups and a companion Sony version. The 2024 slate focused on atmosphere, character work, and long-form, audience-driven pacing.
The Magic of Costumes: Past & Present 👗
The journey began in 2018 with a modest but defining spark: two looks that set the compass for everything that followed. The Mad Scientist introduced a love of lab-made theatrics—goggles, gloves, and a whiff of pulp-era pulp—while Harley Quinn arrived as a bright, chaotic counterpoint whose grin, posture, and playful menace quickly became a touchstone. Even with just those two personas, the blueprint was clear: character-first storytelling, purposeful styling, and a live rapport that made the room feel like a set. That first year proved small can still be cinematic, and it laid the rails for an event fans would circle on their calendars.


By 2019 the palette widened and the pace accelerated. The School Girl and the classic Witch brought instantly readable archetypes, but each was tailored with signature details—the way the Witch’s silhouette caught the light, or how the School Girl’s attitude snapped from coy to daring in a heartbeat. The Dead Bride leaned into bridal horror with tulle and pallor, while the Mermaid shimmered in aquatic tones and movement. A Pop Art original character added saturated color blocks, comic-line makeup, and a wink to gallery culture. Harley Quinn returned sharper and more kinetic, evolving with new beats, poses, and crowd interplay. The year became a study in contrast—familiar icons reimagined alongside new originals—tied together by a rising sense of show craft.



In 2020 the format truly scaled up, with night-by-night reinventions that treated each show like a standalone feature. The Bride came back with refined elegance—cleaner lines, grander gesture—while The Joker swung the pendulum toward chaos with swagger and taunt. A sleek Vampire channeled nocturnal glamour; Deadpool brought irreverent comic timing; Misty from Pokémon layered nostalgia with playful motion; and an Alice-in-Wonderland–inspired Harlequin stitched whimsy to mischief. School Girl and Witch reappeared not as repeats but as new chapters, adjusted for pacing, reveal, and musicality. The audience energy crested across the week, turning 2020 into the benchmark for scale, variety, and momentum.



By 2021 the series embraced range as an aesthetic in itself. Nurse Joker blended clinical precision with grin-and-glove mischief. Morticia Addams delivered slow-burn elegance—lashes, line, and languid poise—while a sculptural Skeleton look transformed anatomy into couture, using negative space and highlight to carve shape from shadow. The Bride and The Witch returned as pillars of continuity, now treated like repertory roles with fresh blocking and beats. A Magician persona introduced sleight-of-hand staging and prop-forward reveals, folding close-up theatrics into the live format. The season felt curated, a cabinet of contrasting moods arranged with deliberate cadence.



In 2022 the dial turned toward chill and ritual. Wednesday Addams arrived with deadpan precision, every blink and braid doing character work. A shuffling, uncanny Zombie contrasted with the focused severity of a Possessed Nun, while the Mermaid resurfaced with new iridescence and flow. Nurse Joker and The Bride anchored recurring mythology, letting fans trace their evolution across years. Princesa de los Muertos added ceremonial color and iconography—floral crowns, sugar-skull nuance, and procession-like movement—expanding the cultural vocabulary of the series and enriching the pageant’s sense of occasion.



The 2023 slate pushed into folklore and force. Kuchisake-onna stepped from urban legend with parted-scar mystery and a stillness that made every tilt of the head land. Lilith embodied command—jewel-dark palette, statuesque lines, and a gaze that read like script. A Viking Warrior brought braided armor aesthetics and battlefield weight, all stomps and shield-maiden stance. The duet with Lana Mysan as Joker and Harley Quinn turned character study into two-person choreography, letting mirroring and banter do narrative lifting. The Witch and The Bride returned again, now functioning like seasonal constellations—familiar stars you can navigate by even as new shapes appear.



In 2024 the focus shifted to atmosphere and long-form immersion. “Creepy Doll Dothy” opened the season on Sunday, October 20, with lacquered porcelain styling, clockwork gestures, and a gaze that played directly to lens and crowd. Two camera masters—forward-facing Panasonic and a moodier Sony angle—gave the performance complementary readings: one intimate and immediate, the other offset and cinematic. The year’s collection expanded with “Seraphina Hexx: Witchcraft Unleashed,” recorded live on February 7 and later issued in both Sony side-angle and Panasonic edits, each emphasizing different aspects of the witch persona—from facial micro-expressions to the ritual pacing of the set. Rounding out the archive, the marathon “Nat & Lana Wednesday (2023)” finally joined the library on October 27 in twin releases: a Panasonic front-angle cut featuring split-screen close-ups during key moments and a companion Sony version that reframed the same encounter with alternate composition. 2024 became the year of perspective—same stories seen from distinct vantage points, proving how camera position can change mood, meaning, and memory.
So far in 2025 the headline has been scale and fidelity. “The Red Demon” arrived as a twin 4K release—Panasonic and Sony—presented as full-stream editions that preserve the live arc from opening beats to final curtain. Viewers who caught the broadcast experienced the front-of-stage Panasonic vantage in 1080p; the archival uploads elevate both angles, with the Panasonic version honoring the original audience viewpoint and the Sony master capturing dramatic, head-on crescendos that read differently in the frame. The production leaned into deep-red costuming, stylized horns and contouring, and smoke-kissed atmosphere, with prop choreography and pacing shaped to the room’s energy. Taken together, the 2025 cuts act like a stereoscopic memory of a single night—two eyes on the same performance—setting a high bar for the year and hinting at where the craft can go next.
The Power of Wishlists: Making the Magic Happen 🎁
The costumes, makeup, and props that bring Halloweek to life wouldn’t be possible without your support through my Amazon Wishlists. Every year, I invest heavily in the creation of these characters, from purchasing custom costumes and high-quality prosthetics to acquiring the perfect accessories that complete each look.
Your contributions through the wishlist help me take these performances to the next level. Whether it’s a specific piece of makeup for a detailed character transformation or a new toy for interactive segments, every item makes a real difference. This year, I’m still adding more to the wishlist as I plan out the final details for the shows, and I’ll be relying on your generosity to help bring the vision to life.
In addition to costumes and makeup, I also use wishlist contributions to enhance the shows with interactive elements like Lovense toys and other gadgets that make the experience more immersive for you. The more you interact, the better the show becomes, and it’s all thanks to the amazing support I receive through these wishlists.
Record-Breaking Halloweek Moments: Can We Beat 2020? 🏆
2020 remains the gold standard—the year when everything aligned and support surged past 60,000 tokens across a week that felt electric from open to close. The chemistry with the audience, the pace of the shows, and the way each character landed turned that season into a legend.
Recent years have reset the baseline and clarified the challenge. In 2024, with a leaner schedule and a focus on cinematic angles and long-form pacing, the season closed at 22,000 tokens—proof that the tradition still resonates even when the format experiments. So far in 2025, the tally sits at 10,000, anchored by the twin 4K “Red Demon” releases that brought the live-night energy into archival form and raised the bar for production quality.
The target is unchanged, and the path is simple: show up, share, and shape what comes next. If momentum builds to rival 2020’s magic, the door opens to more shows, deeper builds, and bigger worlds—turning this year’s highlight reel into the foundation for the next chapter.
Competitions and Achievements: A Legacy of Wins 🏅
Across the seasons, contests have been a proving ground for Halloweek’s craft. In 2020, “The Nun” placed in the Top 20 of the PornHub Halloween Contest, a precision-built performance that balanced atmosphere and character presence. In 2022, the zombie feature “Feargasm: Cock Hungry Zombie” earned a Top 50 spot in the PornHub Viewers’ Choice Contest, driven by audience buzz and steady shares.
The momentum carried into 2023 with a win at the SoulCams Halloween Short Video Contest for “Demon Nun,” a focused, high-impact concept that translated cleanly to short form. These placements are milestones, but they’re also snapshots of collaboration—built on votes, feedback, and the kind of community support that turns a seasonal idea into a standing tradition.
The Future of Halloweek: Let’s Make 2025 Happen! 🔮
This tradition isn’t over—it’s evolving. 2025 is our chance to prove it still belongs on the calendar, and I’m setting a clear goal: I’ll be happy if we hit 30,000 tokens this year. That milestone funds bigger builds, sharper costumes, and more ambitious stages, and it keeps the door open for future chapters rather than a finale.
Halloweek began as a simple spark and grew into a shared world of characters, craft, and live momentum. If you’ve ever tuned in, voted, shared, or whispered an idea that became a look, you’re part of why it works. Help me push this season across the line, and I’ll keep pushing the art forward—new personas, richer sets, and the kind of live alchemy that only happens when we make it together.
Lost Shows: A Call to Help Recover the Magic 📼
Across the years, a few Halloweek performances slipped through the cracks—technical hiccups, corrupted files, and moments that vanished before they could be archived. I’ve done everything I can to preserve the full history, but some chapters are still missing. If you’ve saved recordings or backups from past seasons, your copy could complete the story. I’m grateful for any leads or submissions, and I’ll handle verification and restoration with care. Reuniting these lost shows means preserving the craft, the effort, and the shared memories that built this tradition.
Your Chance to Influence Halloweek
Halloweek is a collaboration between Naughty Natali and the fans who shape every season’s look. If there’s a character or theme you want to see brought to life in October, now’s the moment to steer the creative direction. Share your idea, and I’ll translate it into a build plan—makeup, hair, wardrobe, props—then add the needed pieces to the wishlist. When you pick up an item, you’re funding that transformation and helping it reach the stage. Explore and support the build list here: //www.amazon.de/hz/wishlist/ls/5AVFN9WQ7UQ2
How It Works
- Share Your Vision: Simply let Natali know what character or costume you’d like to see her embrace during Halloweek. Your input is invaluable in creating this enchanting experience.
- Support the Wishlist: Natali will put the necessary makeup and costume supplies on her wishlist based on your suggestions. When you order these supplies, you become part of the creative process.



Immortalizing the Enchantment
Halloweek is a one-of-a-kind event, and its magic deserves to be preserved for years to come. For those who want to relive the enchantment, Naughty Natali offers various formats for Halloweek shows. You can order these shows in VHS, VCD, DVD, BluRay, HDDVD, 4K Disk, and soon, DVHS. Digital downloads of highlights or entire shows are also available on some of the internet’s biggest platforms.