Remote Viewing Beneath Giza: What Lies Under the World’s Most Studied Pyramids
A Down The Rabbit Hole investigation reveals converging remote-viewing data, radar anomalies, and unexplained acoustic evidence beneath the Giza Plateau
Some targets feel symbolic. Some feel historical. And some—when the data begins to converge—feel mechanical.
This was one of those sessions.
In this Down The Rabbit Hole project, four experienced remote viewers—Dennis, Coral, Dimi, and Susan—were tasked under strict blind protocol with a single question:
Are there structures beneath the Giza pyramids—and if so, what are they for?
No mythology.
No speculation.
No cultural overlays.
Only physical, man-made structures… if they existed.
What came back was not vague. It was not metaphorical. And it was not subtle.
It was architectural.
Beneath Giza: Setting the Stage for the Full Remote Viewing Debrief
The Moment the Room Went Quiet
As Project Manager Daz Smith reviewed the incoming sessions, something unusual happened.
Independent viewers—working blind, with only a target number—began describing the same underlying features:
• Deep vertical shafts extending far below bedrock
• Layered chambers and engineered voids
• Energy movement described as spiraling, pulsing, and directional
• Sound, frequency, and vibration as core functional elements
• A system that behaved less like a tomb… and more like a machine
At one point in the debrief, Daz pauses and says what everyone in the room is already thinking:
“Damn… look at this data.”
When the Pyramid Sang Back
Then the session took a turn.
Daz recounts a personal experience from inside the Great Pyramid—one he originally dismissed, until the viewers’ data forced a re-evaluation.
While moving from the Queen’s Chamber into the Grand Gallery during a 2001 visit, he recorded anomalous sound inside the pyramid.
Not echoes. Not footsteps. But music.
Described as angelic tones that resolved into an overwhelming, sustained hum—so loud it drowned out speech. The sound appeared without visible source… and vanished just as suddenly.
At the time, it made no sense.
But during this session, every viewer independently emphasized frequency, resonance, vibration, and sound-based activation as central to what exists beneath Giza.
The recording no longer stands alone.
It now sits inside the data.
Why This Session Matters Now
This target did not occur in a vacuum.
In recent months, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) scans—publicly discussed by independent researchers—have revealed massive vertical anomalies beneath the Giza Plateau, extending hundreds of meters downward.
These findings include:
• Deep cylindrical shafts
• Subsurface chambers
• Structural symmetry inconsistent with natural geology
At the same time, peer-reviewed research from NASA-affiliated scientists has demonstrated that stressed rock can generate mobile electrical charge carriers—a phenomenon linked to earthquake lights and geophysical energy flow.
The implication is profound:
The Earth itself can behave as an electrical reservoir.
And the geometry beneath Giza appears optimized to couple with it.
What the radar suggests…the remote viewers independently described.
Echoes from the Father of Remote Viewing
This is not the first time such claims have surfaced under controlled conditions.
In the 1970s and 1990s, Ingo Swann—widely regarded as the father of modern remote viewing—conducted sessions targeting the Giza pyramids.
His data described:
• Subsurface technology
• Guarded systems
• Non-human oversight
• A structure functioning as an interface, not a burial site
The Down The Rabbit Hole team was not given this information.
Yet their descriptions mirrored Swann’s work with uncanny precision.
Different decade.
Different viewers.
Same architecture.
What the Viewers Converged On
Without revealing the full debrief, the core convergence points were unmistakable:
• The pyramids are not tombs
• Subsurface structures appear intentional and engineered
• Energy flows upward—from below—through the pyramids
• Sound and frequency are not byproducts, but mechanisms
• What exists below may function as an interface or portal system, not a storage vault
One viewer described it plainly:
“The Hall of Records isn’t books. It’s a machine.”
Briefing Clips
🎥 My Pyramid Noise & Swann
🎥 Hidden Tech Under the Pyramids
🎥 “Damn, Look at This Data”
Why the Full Debrief Is Private
The complete session runs over two hours. The data spans hundreds of pages. And the implications deserve care.
This is not entertainment content.
It is intelligence-grade anomalous research, released deliberately and responsibly to FFG members.
What’s presented publicly is the doorway.
What lies beyond requires commitment.
Uncovering Secret Patterns
This session did not uncover a secret.
It confirmed a pattern.
Across decades of remote viewing, emerging geophysical data, and direct human experience, the same conclusion continues to surface:
The pyramids are functional architecture.
Whatever exists beneath them was engineered with intent.
And intent leaves signatures.
The complete Down The Rabbit Hole debrief is available inside FFG.
Follow the data.
Future Forecasting Group is comprised of the best non-military remote viewing team in the world, with decades of experience and a track record to match.
Disclaimer
The insights in this analysis reflect remote-viewing data, historical context, and interpretive synthesis. Remote viewing is an exploratory tool and, like all perception-based methodologies, contains elements of signal, noise, and interpretation. Nothing in this post should be considered definitive historical fact, prophetic guarantee, or a substitute for independent research. Readers are encouraged to engage the material with curiosity, discernment, and an open yet grounded mind.





This project was one of my favorites and still sits with me today. I was so moved by the humility and gratitude of this civilization, especially in their final moments. With love and gratitude they simply stated: we existed and we were here. ❤️
The convergence between viewer descriptions and SAR data is compelling, but the interpretive leap from "anomalous structures" to "functional machinery" needs more triangulation. Stressed rock generating charge carriers is well-documented, but the jump to "optimized coupling" assumes intentional design rather than geological coincidence that ancient builders might have exploited empirically. What's interesting isn't whether the pyramids were tombs (clearly multifunctional), but whether subsurface voids predate construction or were purpose-built. The acoustic anomaly experienc is intriguing, though anechoic chambers can produce phantom tones through standing waves and bone conduction. The Swann convergence is noteworthy, but without knowing what cultural priming the viewers had (Edgar Cayce's Hall of Records is embedded in popular consciousness), it's hard to separate signal from archetypal pattern matching.