On December 11, radio station UVB-76 was more verbose than ever.
Known as the "Doomsday" station, the installation broadcast 24 messages.
This information was shared by the RBC agency with a link to a group on the VKontakte social network that tracks the device’s messages.
The Doomsday Radio station is also known as The Buzzer, as it typically broadcasts simple radar noise.
However, there are cases when "Buzzer" broadcasts articulate words. As a rule, there are not many of them, but on December 11, the radio station broke a kind of record.
There were 24 messages, including incomprehensible words that sounded more like a random order of sounds, linked together for some unknown reason. Thus, the words "khunkhuz", "pankosvod", "lagorach" and "brodoschelk" were heard on the air.
On the same day, the radio station also came out with more meaningful words, such as “gehenna,” “alphabet,” “billiards,” “biotok,” and others.
It is noted that at the moment there is no single theory as to why the radio station is broadcasting these words.
It was called the Doomsday radio station because of the theory that the device could supposedly transmit a signal to automatically launch missiles if all higher-level headquarters were to perish in a nuclear conflict.