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FindArticles > News > Technology

Ultra Skelly: The App-Powered Skeleton that Will Haunt Your Yard

John Melendez
Last updated: September 16, 2025 5:15 pm
By John Melendez
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Yard haunts are getting more wired, louder, and a whole lot more animated — and Ultra Skelly has been at the heart of that arms race. The knee-high, app-controlled, animatronic skeleton from The Home Depot articulates both in the standard too-cool-for-school pose and fully outstretched; this Bluetooth-enabled terror prop combines spooky haunted house aesthetics with futuristic controls, giving homeowners a piece perfect for turning a front lawn into a miniature attraction.

What Makes This Animatronic Skeleton So Special

Ultra Skelly is not just bones on a stand. It walks with five motorized points of articulation — shoulders, hips, neck, and jaw — so poses feel unnervingly lifelike instead of stiff. There’s manual adjustment in the elbows, wrists, and fingers to fine-tune a beckoning hand or a pointing gesture that sells the scare.

Table of Contents
  • What Makes This Animatronic Skeleton So Special
  • Smarter Scares With App Control and Live Features
  • Setup and Build: Simpler Than It Appears
  • Outdoor Readiness and Safety Tips for Your Display
  • Maximize the Effect by Dressing the Bones
  • Why Big Bones Sell: Demand for Giant Halloween Props
  • The Bottom Line: A Show-Stopping Yard Haunt Centerpiece
App-powered Ultra Skelly Halloween skeleton prop haunting a yard with glowing eyes

The eyes are full-color LCDs with a library of animations, from bloodshot human irises to cat and dragon designs. Dual LEDs provide a splash of color, and the stock voice lines play classic haunted house camp with enough menace to thrill trick-or-treaters. It’s a mixture of creepy and charismatic that causes people to halt on the sidewalk instead of sprinting past.

Smarter Scares With App Control and Live Features

Ultra Skelly connects via Bluetooth to the Decor Pro SVI app, where the real fun begins. It’s possible to customize eye animations and choose LED shades; the lighting can be set as solid, pulse with adjustable speed, or strobe. Each voice clip can be paired with different combinations of eye and motion presets, resulting in Skelly never giving the same performance twice in one evening.

The live features are where this prop becomes a local legend.

  • Utilize the power of your mic in real time to communicate with other crew members, or use it for jump-scare fun!

Prefer a set-and-forget approach? Motion-detection mode alternates through your personalized scenes and operates on an approximate 8-hours-on, 16-hours-off schedule to prolong battery life.

Setup and Build: Simpler Than It Appears

Assembly is easy with simple instructions too, despite how big it appears. The bones fit together like a jigsaw puzzle, and a couple of screws keep the torso and hips in place. A magnetized Phillips screwdriver takes the fiddly out of hard-to-reach screws, while a small step stool comes in handy when it’s time to seat the skull at full height.

Designed for stability, the baseplate is engineered to securely hold potted plants all season long, while metal stakes are included to ensure ultimate outdoor wind resistance on soft ground. There is a printed QR code to take you quickly to the app and digital manual, and firmware updates are also done through the app. The whole thing is less like putting together a piece of seasonal decor and more akin to building a movie prop.

Ultra Skelly app-controlled Halloween yard skeleton with glowing LED eyes

Outdoor Readiness and Safety Tips for Your Display

Ultra Skelly is indoor throw-down, outdoor splash-down too, with sealed electronics and gasketed connectors that keep moisture at bay. It’s a plug-in prop, so arrange your placement near a GFCI-protected outlet or an appropriately rated outdoor extension cord. The Consumer Product Safety Commission recommends keeping cords off walkways or taping them down so they don’t cause people to trip, and staking big props into the ground if wind gusts are in the forecast.

If you’re running a multi-device haunt, think about using a smart outdoor plug to power everything down all at once after the last candy bucket has been emptied. That, along with the included timer, keeps the neighborhood nice and quiet after lights out.

Maximize the Effect by Dressing the Bones

Out of the box, Ultra Skelly is a star. Slap on a couple of thrifted accessories and it’s a character. A vintage suit jacket and fedora make it a noir specter; tattered cloak and lantern, a cemetery theme; giant foam book or prop microphone allow you to build a scene around storytelling or songs. Big-and-tall items fit best over the structure; slip ties concealed in sleeves hold fabric in place on breezy nights.

For sound (and costume) design, match Skelly’s voice by adding ambient audio on another speaker or two — low thunder, creaking gates, perhaps, or distant organ music — for added depth without treading on the dialogue. Warm light from below and a cool accent on the side give the face structure while also focusing attention on the animated pupils.

Why Big Bones Sell: Demand for Giant Halloween Props

Consumers are shelling out big money on outdoor displays, and you can see why. According to the National Retail Federation, spending on Halloween is reaching an all-time high and outdoor decorations are one of those popular purchases. Google Trends data consistently reveals that search interest in giant skeletons spikes every spooky season, and neighborhood forums explode with photos the minute shipments land.

Ultra Skelly lands in a sweet spot: more animated and customizable than blow-molds or inflatables, but not quite as unwieldy to place and store as towering mega-props. It costs, I think, around the mid-$200s and folds into manageable segments with few separate parts to consume off-season storage space, as would a full-fledged bone-yard.

The Bottom Line: A Show-Stopping Yard Haunt Centerpiece

Ultra Skelly is ideal if your aim is to halt pedestrians in their tracks, inspire selfies, and, at least for a moment, provide the block with something to gossip over. And so, interpreting to them the desires (and whims) of a house full of dancers is more than just choreography — combined with expressive eyes and a durable outdoor build, it constitutes a performance. I can hardly wait to cue the lights, hit broadcast, and let this bony showman loose on the neighborhood.

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