More is more? This year's craziest Halloween houses don't disappoint

A man in Webster Groves, Missouri, has invested more than 200 hours of work and thousands of dollars in decorating his house. The result? An incredible Halloween house that puts all others to shame.

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It’s not too late to overdo the Halloween decorations.

In Riverside, California, neighbours’ noise complaints to police prompted the shutting down of a 12-000-light, musical Halloween display.

Undeterred, the homeowners got a permit for a block party, which permitted them to close a section of the street — part of the initial complaint was that people were standing in the street to watch the light show — and host a “performance” on Tuesday night.

Once again, their house came alive.

Earlier this week, Yellowknife RCMP responded to reports of a person hanging from a balcony. When they arrived, they quickly discovered the caller had been disturbed by a life-like Halloween decoration.

An effigy was hanging in a noose from a hangman’s post.

The person who installed the Halloween scene said it was for a party. It has since been removed.

Police used the call as an opportunity to warn people about distracting decorations, urging drivers to be on the lookout for children wandering in the streets this week.

Have you spookified your front yard yet? Here’s some over-the-top decor inspiration for you.

This Laguna Hills, California, home transformed into an impressive haunted pyramid.

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These homeowners were inspired by The Walking Dead.

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Too soon? This man found inspiration in Ebola patients’ quarantined apartments.

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This pirate ship got lost in suburbia.

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These decorators just believe that more is more.

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And this Chicago family is too busy to decorate their home for Halloween, so they pay someone else to do it for them — for $4,500 a year (after buying the decorations for $8,000.)

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Do you decorate your home for Halloween?