


Marziani said they are not disclosing who shot it, or the exact location. Miles Marziani, CEO of PlayMobility, said the company created LegendTracker to help get kids “out of the house and out exploring.” They occasionally put out a call for the public to send in any footage pertaining to legends and recently made a call for Sasquatch videos.Ībout two weeks ago, they posted the submitted footage, which has since been picked up by media around the world. The LegendTracker app allows users to go on an “augmented reality geo-caching adventure,” where users can use their phones at specific locations to view legends, such as Ogopogo or the sasquatch. By Tuesday, it had reached over 400,000 views, and stirred up online discussion among those who believe Bigfoot is out there, and those who say the video is fake. The video, posted on YouTube on July 24 by the user LegendTracker, an app for iPhone and Android launched by the company PlayMobility, had already received over 70,000 on Monday.

The Sun, a U.K.-based tabloid, picked up the video and put a story on their website, running it with the headline, “Is this mystery figure Bigfoot?” Fox News, the Huffington Post and other media outlets around the world have since posted the video on their websites. They captured a hairy figure in the distance on film, and the video was placed online. The YouTube clip was posted by a B.C.-based software company that creates smartphone games, and claims the footage was shot by a couple who had been hiking along a logging road above a lake in Mission, when they spotted something moving in the distance. Video footage of an alleged sasquatch shot in Mission has gone viral, and reported in media around the world.
