Truth, Inspiration, Hope.

Global Outcry Over Yu Menglong’s Mysterious Death: Evidence Point to Ritual ‘Sacrifice’

Published: October 9, 2025
Popular mainland Chinese actor Yu Menglong, also known as Alan Yu, fell to his death at Beijing’s Sunshine Upper East complex on Sept. 11, 2025. (Image: Online Screenshot)

By Cai Siyuan, Vision Times

The mysterious death of mainland Chinese actor Yu Menglong, who allegedly fell from a building in Beijing on Sept. 11 under suspicious circumstances, has triggered a tidal wave of global outrage and mounting calls for a full investigation.

Now, leaked information from multiple insiders now suggests that Yu’s death may have been a ritual sacrifice, premeditated years in advance. Even more disturbingly, as early as four years ago, someone had posted online predicting the exact date of his death in a revelation that has stunned netizens.

Adding to the intrigue, a well-known feng shui master has claimed that Yu’s death was linked to imperial “longevity rituals” and the ancient practice of human sacrifice.

RELATED: From Beijing to Washington: Yu Menglong’s Death Draws Global Attention

A foretold death?

Since Yu’s death, a flood of videos, leaked footage, and insider reports has emerged — many of which are suggesting the involvement of high-ranking CCP elites. Despite the authorities’ sweeping censorship campaign aimed at suppressing conversation related to Yu’s death, countless netizens have risked detention to continue sharing information and demand answers from Chinese authorities.

According to “Sound of Hope TV”, netizens discovered an online post dated Sept. 11, 2021, exactly four years before Yu’s death. It read: “Four years from today, Menglong will ascend. Then all shall be revealed.”

RELATED: ‘They Killed Me’: Psychics, Prophecies, and the Search for the Truth Behind Yu Menglong’s Death

Commentators say this message indicates that Yu’s death was deliberately planned, with the date chosen for symbolic reasons. Others noted that Sept. 10 — the day before his death — holds numerological significance: Yu died at 37, and 3 + 7 = 10. In numerology, the number 10 symbolizes “completion,” suggesting he may have been selected as a “perfect offering.”

Another eerie comment, posted under a July 24 ad for Bosideng (a brand Yu endorsed), warned: “Yu Menglong already has one foot in the King of Hell’s hall.”

An eerie poem

After Yu’s death, screenwriter Wang Yucen revealed that Yu had once talked her out of suicide, saying his compassion had “saved her life.”

However, netizens soon discovered that Wang was a senior executive at Tianyu Media, Yu’s management company. On September 9 — just two days before Yu’s death — Wang reportedly posted a short poem that appeared to foreshadow his passing.

Its tone and timing fueled speculation that she may have played a role, directly or indirectly, in the tragedy. Around the same time, a mysterious short video surfaced online with a voiceover that said: “The last time is always the scariest — you never realize it’s the last time. No farewell, no warning, only regret.”

Though the video was deleted soon after, screenshots quickly spread online, intensifying public suspicion that Yu’s death had been carefully staged and planned.

Trapped in a secret network

Analysts now believe Yu’s death was the result of years of orchestration. In one leaked video, Yu tearfully stated that he had been threatened since age 25, implying more than a decade of surveillance and manipulation at the hands of those wishing to do him harm.

“He knew he would die,” one netizen wrote. “He just didn’t know when. Imagine the strength it takes to smile at fans while living with that fear every day.”

Sources also say Yu had been added to a private chat group that discussed cryptic “projects” and coded rituals. By the time he realized the group’s purpose, surveillance around him had become total. “He knew he was marked,” wrote one user. “What he didn’t know was when they would come for him.”

Will there be another victim?

Following Yu’s death, actor Jackson Yee (Yi Yangqianxi) — who had not livestreamed for eight years — suddenly went live. He said nothing throughout the stream and just quietly stacked stones and sighed.

Viewers interpreted it as a wordless tribute to Yu — a silent act of mourning and defiance. “He fought with dignity,” one comment read. “His death might save those still under control.”

But public records also reveal that actors Jackson Yee, Guo Junchen, and Gong Jun are all connected to companies registered under “military-linked trademarks,” raising concerns among online investigators. Unverified reports claim that Guo Junchen may be the next target, as his age, personality, and appearance closely mirror Yu’s.

“Every few years, one actor falls,” wrote one netizen. “The patterns — the ages, the birthdays, the symbols — all align too neatly to be coincidence.”

Birthdays, numbers, and a pattern of ‘sacrifice

Observers also noticed uncanny overlaps: Yu Menglong shares a birthday (June 15) with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, while Guo Junchen’s birthday — October 1 — is China’s National Day, referred to by dissidents as the “Day of National Mourning.”

Between actor Qiao Renliang’s death in 2016 and Yu’s in 2025 lies exactly nine years. Guo, now 28, will turn 37 in nine years — Yu’s age at death. Fans alarmed by these coincidences flooded social media with warnings, pleading with Guo to “stay safe and never be alone.”

One viral comment even linked the case directly to Xi Jinping’s family: “[This is] a live human sacrifice! Qiao Renliang shared a birthday with Xi’s father; Yu Menglong shared his birthday with Xi himself. Both were brutally killed… the torture of Yu Menglong was to extend Xi’s life.”

Feng Shui: Yu’s death is tied to Xi

Political commentator Li Dayu said on his YouTube channel that he initially suspected Yu’s death was part of a ritual killing, but was shocked to discover its alleged connection to a life-extension ceremony for China’s top leader.

Li said Feng Shui expert Ma Xian’s analysis “finally made everything click” for him: “Everything Yu experienced fits too precisely with the patterns of a ritual intended to extend someone else’s life.”

According to Li, top CCP leaders, including Xi Jinping, are known to believe in supernatural forces. He said Xi frequently visits temples, Taoist sanctuaries, and Tibetan sites in search of ways to “prolong life and fortune.”

“Some people once said Xi’s fate had reached its limit,” said Li. “Now it seems he’s relying on occult life-extension using living humans.”

Belief in the supernatural among CCP elites

Li described the “logic” of such rituals: When a person’s life force wanes, they seek a “replacement death” — a victim with matching astrological traits. Blood, he said, is essential as it symbolizes the transference of vitality.

Celebrities are often chosen because, in certain occult beliefs, they possess both yin and yang energy, making them “ideal vessels” for sacrifice. According to Li, selected victims must abstain from meat for months to “purify the body.”

Yu Menglong reportedly mentioned during a livestream that he had not eaten for days, consuming only vegetables. Similarly, actor Qiao Renliang was said to have become vegetarian before his death in 2016. “These are not coincidences,” noted Li. “It’s a timeline of preparation disguised as celebrity life.”

According to Li, Master Ma claimed that Yu’s selection aligned with astrological conditions tied to Xi’s zodiac year — the Year of the Snake. “According to their occult logic, the ritual must be conducted during this year to renew life energy,” said Li.

The Sept. 3 military parade, a blood moon on September 7–8, and violent storms around September 10–11 allegedly coincided with the ritual timeline.

A ‘soul transfer’

“Once all signs converged,” said Li, “they moved ahead right after the September 3 parade — choosing September 10 as the day of sacrifice.” According to Li, Yu was tortured for an entire day as part of a “soul-separation” ritual — a process meant to release his “seven souls.”

“The first person to absorb a soul would shout ‘hao chi’ — meaning ‘delicious’ — followed by ‘hao chuan’ and ‘hao yin,’ each symbolizing different desires.”

Film director Cheng Qingsong, one of the suspects, allegedly posted “hao chi” (“delicious”) on Weibo (a popular blogging and social media app in China) after Yu’s death — the same phrase he used following Qiao Renliang’s passing in 2016. “It’s like a coded confession,” noted Li. “A ritual marker hidden in plain sight.”

Sinister rituals and ceremonies

Investigators also noted that Yu was wearing two limited-edition Rolex watches with concentric-circle dials — a symbol, analysts say, of “life cycles” and energy transfer. “These circles represent the closing and reopening of fate — the completion of one life to feed another,” said Master Ma.

Counting 49 days from the Sept. 3 parade leads directly to October 20–23 — the dates of the CCP’s Fourth Plenary Session in Beijing. “It aligns perfectly with a key political cycle,” Ma noted. “If this was truly a life-extension ritual, it was designed to channel vitality into that moment of power transition.”

Shortly after Yu’s death, Beijing witnessed several unusual natural events — a historic hailstorm on Sept. 13 and the sudden splitting of the thousand-year-old bodhi tree at Tanzhe Temple on Sept. 15. “When blood rituals are carried out under Heaven,” Master Ma said, “the natural world answers.”

‘No longer a conspiracy’

Chinese netizens, inside and outside the Great Firewall, have flooded platforms with messages of grief, outrage, and disbelief: “This is beyond wicked. The CCP’s obsession with the occult shows that regime change may not be far away.”

“It’s pure evil! I beg any masters of spiritual arts to help dispel these curses,” wrote another.

Many netizens who once dismissed the idea of ritual killing have now changed their minds. “People said months ago it was a sacrifice,” wrote one netizen. “I didn’t believe it then, but now everything fits — every strange detail finally makes sense. This is no longer a conspiracy.”

Thousands also left poetic tributes beneath censored hashtags:

  • “Menglong, you must have known why these demons came for you.”
  • “May the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas bring justice soon, and may these demons meet their retribution.”
  • “He may have appeared delicate, yet he possessed an iron will. He died standing — and in dying, he awakened a nation.”

Global outcry show no signs of waning

Despite heavy censorship, the case has drawn international coverage from outlets including “Foreign Policy”, “BBC,” “The Straits Times,” and “CNA Taiwan,” have all joined in calling for transparency and justice for Yu.

An online petition demanding accountability has also surpassed 240,000 signatures. Observers say Yu’s death has shattered illusions of the CCP’s invincibility by exposing what they call a regime built on fear, superstition, and blood.

“Yu Menglong died standing,” one journalist wrote. “But in dying, he awakened a nation — and perhaps began the countdown to this tyranny’s end.”

Editor’s Note: This account reflects a traditional folk tale. There is no verifiable evidence supporting supernatural claims.