From October 2 to 13, 2019, WTFpass offered Premium-level access to anyone who signed up — no payment needed, just an email. No credit card on file. No trial expiration warning. Just pure, unfiltered access to their deepest vaults.
Archived by: The Unlicensed Media Preservation Society Last accessed: Never again.
In the sprawling graveyard of forgotten subscription services, few names carry the strange, semi-mythical weight of . And no period in its short, chaotic life is more shrouded in user lore than the 11-day window of October 2–13, 2019 — the “Premium Accounts” drop.
The WTFpass Premium Accounts event (Oct 2–13, 2019) is now a digital folklore case study — a reminder that in the age of corporate streaming, small, chaotic platforms can still create fleeting, anarchic utopias. For 11 days, the walls came down. Then they went back up. But for those who were there… they still have the downloads.
For the uninitiated, WTFpass was a short-lived, cult-favorite platform that aggregated bizarre, uncensored, and often legally-questionable streaming content: forgotten late-night VHS dubs, underground indie horror, international shockumentaries, and “lost” web series. By 2019, it was bleeding users to mainstream giants. Then came the Premium Accounts promo.
Wtfpass Premium Accounts 2 - 13 October 2019 Apr 2026
From October 2 to 13, 2019, WTFpass offered Premium-level access to anyone who signed up — no payment needed, just an email. No credit card on file. No trial expiration warning. Just pure, unfiltered access to their deepest vaults.
Archived by: The Unlicensed Media Preservation Society Last accessed: Never again.
In the sprawling graveyard of forgotten subscription services, few names carry the strange, semi-mythical weight of . And no period in its short, chaotic life is more shrouded in user lore than the 11-day window of October 2–13, 2019 — the “Premium Accounts” drop.
The WTFpass Premium Accounts event (Oct 2–13, 2019) is now a digital folklore case study — a reminder that in the age of corporate streaming, small, chaotic platforms can still create fleeting, anarchic utopias. For 11 days, the walls came down. Then they went back up. But for those who were there… they still have the downloads.
For the uninitiated, WTFpass was a short-lived, cult-favorite platform that aggregated bizarre, uncensored, and often legally-questionable streaming content: forgotten late-night VHS dubs, underground indie horror, international shockumentaries, and “lost” web series. By 2019, it was bleeding users to mainstream giants. Then came the Premium Accounts promo.