send link to app

iDrakula app for iPhone and iPad


4.9 ( 8919 ratings )
Entertainment Book
Developer: Sourcebooks, Inc.
Free
Current version: 1.0, last update: 8 years ago
First release : 01 Oct 2010
App size: 11.5 Mb

A modern retelling of the original vampire tale recounted in text, email and even voice mail.

Fast-paced and haunting, iDRAKULA is too juicy to resist. Based on the original text of Bram Stoker’s classic gothic vampire novel, iDRAKULA will thrust you into the chilling correspondence between friends as they try to uncover the truth about an eerie Romanian Count.

Mina and Jonathan’s friend Renfield has been admitted to the psychiatric ward. Seems he went crazy while working for the Count. Jonathan’s taking over for him at the Count’s castle and soon realizes there might be good cause for Renfield’s breakdown. Something terrifying is going on and Jonathan could be next to lose his mind—or his life. Mina must try to solve the mystery before it’s too late…

iDrakula is a revolution in horror storytelling. Messages in your app will be unlocked daily at midnight as the story progresses so you will virtually experience the chilling events as they occur. Through the app, you’ll intercept text messages, emails, photos, and more from our unlikely heroes and villains. Exclusive to this app are embedded voicemail messages with extra eerie details. Of course, if you cannot wait to brave the next day’s messages, you can always choose to read them all at once…if you dare.

Sample the first (5) days of messages in this free app, and then download the entire story for $1.99.

Praise for Bekka Black’s print edition of iDrakula:

"Bekka Black expertly interweaves story and technology in this timely Dracula tale." --Rebecca Maizel, author of Infinite Days

“Bold, innovative, and warped, Bekka shakes the dust off of Draculas cloak and creates a whole new genre of literature. iDrakula is an insanely imaginative tour de force." – James Rollins, New York Times bestselling author

“Forget the modern vampire, who sparkles in the sunlight and struggles with the desire for blood. Black brings Bram into the modern age with e-mails, smart phones and websites, all while preserving the brooding heart and vicious nature of Dracula.”--Kirkus