FAQ

Alien Life Archive is a serious research-style platform dedicated to collecting, organizing and presenting information about alleged UFO encounters, reported non-human entities, unexplained events, witness accounts, historical cases, documents, theories and modern folklore connected with the possibility of non-human intelligence.

The purpose of this archive is not to claim that every story is true, but to document what has been reported, compare recurring patterns and preserve cases that continue to raise questions.


Does this website claim that aliens are real?

No. Alien Life Archive does not claim that any specific entity, encounter or theory is proven to be real.

The website explores alleged cases, witness reports, cultural beliefs, historical documents, government materials, books, interviews and speculative theories. Some stories may be misunderstandings, myths, hoaxes or psychological experiences. Others may remain unexplained.

Our goal is to examine the material carefully, not to present belief as fact.


Why do you include alleged alien entities such as Greys, Mantids or Reptilians?

These entity types appear repeatedly in UFO lore, abduction narratives, conspiracy theories, witness accounts, books, documentaries and paranormal culture. Whether they are real, symbolic, psychological or fictionalized, they have become part of the modern mythology of non-human intelligence.

The Entity archive documents how these beings are described, where the ideas come from, which cases they are associated with and how strong or weak the available evidence appears to be.


Are the cases on this website verified?

Not always. Some cases are based on official documents, historical records, press reports or multiple witnesses. Others come from personal testimony, books, interviews, hypnosis-based accounts or folklore.

Each case should be treated according to the strength of the available sources. When possible, we distinguish between:

reported facts, such as dates, locations, witnesses or official records;
claims, such as alleged entities, recovered memories or hidden programs;
interpretations, such as extraterrestrial, interdimensional, psychological or mythological explanations.


What does “evidence” mean on this website?

The word “evidence” is used broadly. It may include witness testimony, photographs, videos, radar reports, government documents, press articles, physical trace claims, historical records, books, interviews or psychological studies.

Not all evidence has the same value. A government file confirming that a report was made is not the same as proof of non-human intelligence. A witness account may be important, but it does not automatically prove that an event happened exactly as described.

The archive aims to show what exists, how strong it is and what alternative explanations may be possible.


Why does the website include skeptical explanations?

Because a serious archive must include more than one interpretation.

Many reported encounters may be explained by sleep paralysis, false memories, dreams, misidentified aircraft, military technology, natural phenomena, hoaxes, cultural influence or psychological stress. Including skeptical explanations does not mean dismissing witnesses. It means treating the subject responsibly.

A person may have had a real and powerful experience even if the final explanation remains uncertain.


Are witness stories treated with respect?

Yes. Alien Life Archive treats witness reports as important parts of the historical and cultural record of UFO and non-human intelligence claims.

However, respect does not mean automatic acceptance. Personal experiences are documented as claims or testimonies unless supported by stronger evidence. The website avoids mocking witnesses, but also avoids presenting personal accounts as confirmed proof.


Can readers submit their own stories?

Yes. Readers are invited to share personal encounter stories, strange memories, local legends, case suggestions, opinions about the website or ideas for future content.

Messages can be sent to:

stories@alienlifearchive.com

Submitted stories may help us identify recurring patterns, overlooked locations, lesser-known cases or new areas of interest for the archive.


Will every submitted story be published?

No. Not every submission will be published or added to the archive.

Stories may be reviewed, edited, summarized or kept for internal research. We may choose not to publish content that is unclear, harmful, impossible to contextualize, offensive, overly personal or not suitable for the purpose of the website.

If a story is used publicly, personal details should be removed or protected unless the author clearly agrees otherwise.


Is Alien Life Archive a scientific project?

Alien Life Archive is not a scientific institution and does not present itself as proof of extraterrestrial life. It is a research-style archive and editorial project focused on documentation, storytelling, source collection, comparison of patterns and cultural analysis.

The website combines serious presentation with mysterious subject matter. It is designed for readers interested in UFO history, alleged encounters, non-human entity lore, unexplained phenomena, ancient myths and speculative theories.


Does the website promote conspiracy theories?

The website may describe conspiracy theories because they are part of UFO culture and non-human intelligence lore. However, describing a theory does not mean endorsing it.

Alien Life Archive avoids promoting harmful claims, harassment, hatred or accusations against real groups of people. Conspiracy-related content should be presented as mythology, belief, speculation or disputed interpretation — not as confirmed fact.


Why are myths, folklore and ancient stories included?

Many modern UFO themes resemble older stories about gods from the sky, angels, demons, fairies, serpent beings, sea creatures, star people and strange visitors. These connections do not prove that ancient people encountered aliens, but they show how human cultures have long imagined contact with unknown intelligences.

The Myths & origins section explores these patterns carefully, as cultural and historical material rather than confirmed evidence.


What is the purpose of the credibility rating?

The credibility rating helps readers understand how strong or weak a case or claim appears to be.

A case with multiple witnesses, official documents or sensor data is different from a story based only on anonymous internet posts or recovered memories. The rating does not decide the final truth. It simply helps organize the archive and guide readers through different levels of reliability.


How should readers approach this website?

With curiosity and caution.

Alien Life Archive is for people who enjoy mysteries, unexplained reports, UFO history and the possibility that some encounters may be more than imagination. At the same time, the subject requires careful thinking, skepticism and respect for uncertainty.

Some stories may be myths.
Some may be mistakes.
Some may be symbolic.
Some may remain unexplained.